Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray
Art can be beautiful, but it can also be ugly. A sin, for instance, can be a test of an individual’s moral limits, and this sin can teach a person how to become more humane and make the world a better place through the acute use of justice, intelligence, science, and feelings to correct that sin. And in an age where pleasure became the only means to feed the curiosity of the soul, and where each move was a challenge, Oscar Wilde created Dorian Gray as the embodiment of these challenges. Oscar Wilde: The Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic is a critical essay about the importance of the arts in modern society, and author Abdellah Ben Megdoul takes words and actions independently of their social and moral values and puts them one beside the other to build Dorian Gray’s innocence—and thus Wilde’s innocence. Is Dorian Gray really responsible for the actress’s agony and death? Is he responsible for the perversion and degeneracy? Was it really perversion and degeneracy? Or, like most us, is Gray simply a victim of his personal aspirations? This critical essay will try to separate Dorian from his sins. Once jailed, Wilde was denied even a pen to carry on doing what he loved most: writing. This is a sin in itself—the worst sin and crime that was committed against any individual to receive sentence.
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Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray
Art can be beautiful, but it can also be ugly. A sin, for instance, can be a test of an individual’s moral limits, and this sin can teach a person how to become more humane and make the world a better place through the acute use of justice, intelligence, science, and feelings to correct that sin. And in an age where pleasure became the only means to feed the curiosity of the soul, and where each move was a challenge, Oscar Wilde created Dorian Gray as the embodiment of these challenges. Oscar Wilde: The Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic is a critical essay about the importance of the arts in modern society, and author Abdellah Ben Megdoul takes words and actions independently of their social and moral values and puts them one beside the other to build Dorian Gray’s innocence—and thus Wilde’s innocence. Is Dorian Gray really responsible for the actress’s agony and death? Is he responsible for the perversion and degeneracy? Was it really perversion and degeneracy? Or, like most us, is Gray simply a victim of his personal aspirations? This critical essay will try to separate Dorian from his sins. Once jailed, Wilde was denied even a pen to carry on doing what he loved most: writing. This is a sin in itself—the worst sin and crime that was committed against any individual to receive sentence.
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Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray

by Abdellah Ben Megdoul
Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar Wilde: the Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic: A Critical Essay on the Picture of Dorian Gray

by Abdellah Ben Megdoul

eBook

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Overview

Art can be beautiful, but it can also be ugly. A sin, for instance, can be a test of an individual’s moral limits, and this sin can teach a person how to become more humane and make the world a better place through the acute use of justice, intelligence, science, and feelings to correct that sin. And in an age where pleasure became the only means to feed the curiosity of the soul, and where each move was a challenge, Oscar Wilde created Dorian Gray as the embodiment of these challenges. Oscar Wilde: The Aesthetic, the Angelic, the Satanic is a critical essay about the importance of the arts in modern society, and author Abdellah Ben Megdoul takes words and actions independently of their social and moral values and puts them one beside the other to build Dorian Gray’s innocence—and thus Wilde’s innocence. Is Dorian Gray really responsible for the actress’s agony and death? Is he responsible for the perversion and degeneracy? Was it really perversion and degeneracy? Or, like most us, is Gray simply a victim of his personal aspirations? This critical essay will try to separate Dorian from his sins. Once jailed, Wilde was denied even a pen to carry on doing what he loved most: writing. This is a sin in itself—the worst sin and crime that was committed against any individual to receive sentence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781546297109
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication date: 01/23/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 108
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Abdellah Ben Megdoul is a French-Moroccan citizen, and he was born in Morocco but spent twenty years in Paris, Dublin, London, and Madrid before going back to Casablanca, Morocco, for two years; today he works and lives in Dubai. He has a bachelor of arts degree in Irish literature, a master of arts degree in English literature, and a master of philosophy degree in Anglo-Saxon literature, and he is in perpetual search of the perfect light, trying to astonish himself rather than others.
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