Category
JFL, 261A
Description
In studying De Profundis, some scholars – Max Beerbohm, Molly Robinson Kelly, and Carol Schnitzer, among others – have either claimed Oscar Wilde’s encounter with Christ to be inauthentic or altogether failed to address Christ’s prominence in the letter. This study, however, excavates the text with a more spiritual eye. Moving from a direct address of Sir Alfred Douglas to an intense self-observation, and finally, to a focus on the person and deity of Christ, Wilde’s letter leads him to increasingly spiritual and authentic realizations. He threads three main characteristics of revelation – imagination, humility, and suffering – throughout the letter, eventually finding them to be fully embodied in Jesus. In this analysis, I aim to bring to light the ways in which Wilde’s search for revelation, aided by his understanding of these characteristics, leads him to a Christological enlightenment. I also suggest that, as a byproduct of Wilde’s self-realizations, he calls into question the aesthetic ideals he had previously dedicated himself to. Furthering my refutation of the claim that his turn to Christ is superficial, I conclude with a brief overview of Wilde’s life post-incarceration and the ways it evidences the impact of his enlightenment. Keywords: Oscar Wilde, De Profundis, Christ, revelation, imagination, humility, suffering.
Clarity in Christ: Oscar Wilde’s Revelation Through Imagination, Humility, and Suffering in De Profundis
JFL, 261A
In studying De Profundis, some scholars – Max Beerbohm, Molly Robinson Kelly, and Carol Schnitzer, among others – have either claimed Oscar Wilde’s encounter with Christ to be inauthentic or altogether failed to address Christ’s prominence in the letter. This study, however, excavates the text with a more spiritual eye. Moving from a direct address of Sir Alfred Douglas to an intense self-observation, and finally, to a focus on the person and deity of Christ, Wilde’s letter leads him to increasingly spiritual and authentic realizations. He threads three main characteristics of revelation – imagination, humility, and suffering – throughout the letter, eventually finding them to be fully embodied in Jesus. In this analysis, I aim to bring to light the ways in which Wilde’s search for revelation, aided by his understanding of these characteristics, leads him to a Christological enlightenment. I also suggest that, as a byproduct of Wilde’s self-realizations, he calls into question the aesthetic ideals he had previously dedicated himself to. Furthering my refutation of the claim that his turn to Christ is superficial, I conclude with a brief overview of Wilde’s life post-incarceration and the ways it evidences the impact of his enlightenment. Keywords: Oscar Wilde, De Profundis, Christ, revelation, imagination, humility, suffering.
Comments
Graduate