Acting Wilde
'I love acting - it is so much more real than life,' Oscar Wilde famously wrote. Acting Wilde demonstrates that Wilde's plays, fiction, and critical theory are organised by the idea that all so-called 'reality' is a mode of performance, and that the 'meanings' of life are really the scripted elements of a dramatic spectacle. Wilde's real issue was whether one could become the author of his own script, the creator of the character and role he inhabits. It was a question he struggled to answer from the beginning of his career to the end, whether in his position as the pre-eminent dramatist in English or as the beleaguered defendant on trial for 'gross indecency'. Introducing important evidence from Wilde's career-launching tour of America, the often tortured revisions of his plays, and the recently discovered written record of his first courtroom trial, this book reconstructs Wilde's strategic dramatising of himself.
- Was the first book to present the fascinating evidence of the transcript of Wilde's courtroom trial
- Places Wilde's revolutionary attitudes within the context of late-Victorian developments in the understanding of gender and sexuality
- Extensive study available of Wilde's sexuality, life-experience, and playwriting in relation to contemporary theories of performance
Reviews & endorsements
'… Powell's book is distinctive for its historicizing approach and its well-informed reliance on pre-publication materials …' Modern Drama
Product details
October 2009Hardback
9780521516921
216 pages
235 × 160 × 14 mm
0.48kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Acting Wilde
- 1. Posing and dis-posing: Oscar Wilde in America and beyond
- 2. Pure Wilde: feminism and masculinity in Lady Windermere's Fan, Salomé, and A Woman of No Importance
- 3. Performance anxiety in An Ideal Husband
- 4. Performativity and history: The Importance of Being Earnest
- 5. The 'lost' transcript, sexual acting, and the meaning of Wilde's trials
- 6. Prison performativity
- Epilogue: Wilde and modern drama
- Bibliography of manuscripts and printed sources.