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Cosmopolitan Conglomeration and Orientalist Appropriation in Oscar Wilde’s The Sphinx

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Katharina Herold examines the interplay of cosmopolitanism and orientalism in Wilde's poem 'The Sphinx'.
Wilde’s Orient is inspired by impressions from his father’s extended travels to the Middle East and North Africa in 1837, literary French influences, his friend Charles Ricketts and not least his own keen interest in ancient archaeology. Looking at images from the Middle East in Wilde’s poem 'The Sphinx' (published 1894), this paper interrogates Wilde’s literary manifestation of this cosmopolitan ideal of appropriation and conglomeration. Does Wilde’s resistance to nationalistic specification qualify as Orientalist because it ignores political implications of engrossing foreign cultural traits and disconnecting them from their history? Or indeed, could we consider Wilde a pioneer of multicultural fusion of national identities that results in celebrating literature as the ideal of aestheticist beauty transcending categories of national origin?

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters

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Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Katharina Herold
Keywords
literature
literary criticism
cosmopolitianism
wilde
egyptomania
orientalism
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 00:24:09

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