Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Dorian Grey Review essays
Dorian Grey Review essays    In the novel The Picture of Dorian Grey homosexuality is an important aspect of the novel, and the book     deserves credit as a pioneering depection of homosexual relationships in serious English fiction.  The depection     of homosexualtity in the book is undoubtedly shaped by Wildes personal ambivalences toward his own     sexuality which is found expressed both in idealized love affairs and in liaisions with prostitutes.  It is important     to stress that the novels primary intrest is literaty rather than biographical, and that Wilde hints at homosexuality     rather than expresses it directly.  Homosexual readers would certainly have responded to the books under     current of gay feeling, and may have found the very name Dorian suggestive of Greek homosexuality, since it     was the Dorian tribesman who allegedly intorduced homosexuality into Greece as part of their military regimen.      Wilde purposely leaves the exact nature of the sins of Dorian Grey mysterious and vague, suggested but not     	Wildes attitude toward homosexuality in the novel may best be seen in his portrayal of Basil Hallward.      Hallward is the character mast clearly defined as homosexual, and it is significant that he is presented as the     most morally sensitive character as well.  His love for Dorian seems altogther noble, especially in contrast to the     blandishments of Lord Henry, his rival for the young mans affection.  In the triangle formed by the competition     of the two older men for the attention of the beautiful boy, Basil represents an idealized, platonized     homosexuality, linked to a long tradidtion of art and philosophy.  Wilde conceives of Basils homosexual love     for Dorian as something positive but dangerous, an emotion that inspires guilt and fear: measures , respetively,     of the internal and external condemnations brought to bear against homosexuality.      	In the end it seems that it is Basil homosexual love for Dorian th...     
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