List of Figures
Preface and Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
PART I - Romanticism, Nihilism, and Revivalism: Oscar Wilde, 1874-1882
1 Oscar Wilde and the Importance of Being Romantic - Chris Foss (University of Mary Washington)
2 Reconsidering Wilde’s Vera; or, the Nihilists- Elizabeth Carolyn Miller (University of California, Davis)
3 Misrecognizing Wilde: Media and Performance on the American Tour of 1882 - Gregory Castle (Arizona State University)
PART II - JOURNALISM: OSCAR WILDE AND THE WOMAN’S WORLD, 1887-1889
4 The Aesthetic Character of Oscar Wilde’s Woman’s World - Molly Youngkin (Loyola Marymount University)
5 Oscar Wilde, Aesthetic Dress, and the Modern Woman: Or Why Sargent’s Portrait of Ellen Terry Appeared in Woman’s World - Loretta Clayton (Macon State College)
PART III - Faith, Belief, and Fiction: Oscar Wilde, 1889-1891
6 Sexual Gnosticism: The Procreative Code of “The Portrait of Mr. W. H.” - James Campbell (University of Central Florida)
7 Reading and Re-reading: Wilde, Newman, and the Fiction of Belief - Rachel Ablow (New York State University at Buffalo)
8 Oscar Wilde’s Poetic Injustice in The Picture of Dorian Gray - Neil Hultgren (California State University)
Part IV: Translation, Performance, and Fashion: Oscar Wilde and the Stage
9 Wilde’s French - William A. Cohen – (University of Maryland)
10 Fashioning the Modern Woman’s Sexual Turn from Salomé to Ulysses, 1892-1922 - Lois Cucullu (University of Minnesota)
11 Oscar Wilde’s Anadoodlegram: A Genetic, Performative Reading of An Ideal Husband - John Paul Riquelme (Boston University)
12 Transgressive Props; or Oscar Wilde’s E(a)rnest Signifier - Felicia J. Ruff (Wagner College)
Part V - Modern Quests for Oscar Wilde
13 Christopher Millard’s Mysterious Book: Oscar Wilde, Baron Corvo, and the Unwritten Quest - Ellen Crowell (Saint Louis University)
Index