Beautiful untrue things : forging Oscar Wilde's extraordinary afterlife

Author(s)

    • Mackie, Gregory

Bibliographic Information

Beautiful untrue things : forging Oscar Wilde's extraordinary afterlife

Gregory Mackie

University of Toronto Press, c2019

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-266) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Borrowing its title from Oscar Wilde's essay "The Decay of Lying," this study engages questions of fraudulent authorship in the literary afterlife of Oscar Wilde. The unique cultural moment of Wilde's early-twentieth-century afterlife, Gregory Mackie argues, afforded a space for marginal and transgressive forms of literary production that, ironically enough, Wilde himself would have endorsed. Beautiful Untrue Things recovers the careers of several forgers who successfully inhabited the persona of the Victorian era's most infamous homosexual and arguably its most successful dramatist. More broadly, this study tells a larger story about Oscar Wilde's continued cultural impact at a moment when he had fallen out of favour with the literary establishment. It probes the activities of a series of eccentric and often outrageous figures who inhabited Oscar Wilde's much-mythologized authorial persona - in forging him, they effectively wrote as Wilde - in order to argue that literary forgery can be reimagined as a form of performance. But to forge Wilde and generate "beautiful untrue things" in his name is not only an exercise in role-playing - it is also crucially a form of imaginative world-making, resembling what we describe today as fan fiction.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction: The Truth of Fakes 1. The Importance of Being Authentic 2. The Picture of Dorian Hope 3. Pen, Pencil, and Planchette 4. The Devoted Fraud Conclusion: The Teacher of Fandom Notes Bibliography

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