Amours de Voyage
Arthur Hugh Clough’s verse-novel, Amours de Voyage was completed shortly after the events of the 1849 Roman Republic, which Clough witnessed as a tourist. Amours de Voyage was first published in The Atlantic Monthly in four parts in 1858: Canto I in Vol. 1.4 (February, 1858); Canto II in Vol. 1.5 (March 1858); Canto III in Vol. 1.6 (April 1858); and Cantos IV and V in Vol. 1.7 (May 1858).
Lord Arthur Savile's Crime
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Oscar Wilde and the Evolution of the Gothic in an Age of Epistemological Upheaval
Oscar Wilde and the Evolution of the Gothic in an Age of Epistemological Upheaval
A Life Lived as Art
A Life Lived as Art
“Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime”; Or, an Anti-Morality Tale about Murder and Public Image
“Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime”; Or, an Anti-Morality Tale about Murder and Public Image
Wilde Meant that Letterally: An Analysis of the Correspondence of Oscar Wilde
Wilde Meant that Letterally: An Analysis of the Correspondence of Oscar Wilde
Killing the New Woman – Defining “Self” in Wilde’s “The Sphinx Without a Secret”
Killing the New Woman – Defining “Self” in Wilde’s “The Sphinx Without a Secret”
Editorial Introduction to Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories (1891)
Editorial Introduction to Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories (1891) by Oscar Wilde
[Because brief biographies of Oscar Wilde are so readily available—including in the COVE edition of Wilde’s poem “The Harlot’s House—this introduction will forgo discussion of Wilde’s life beyond those elements specifically pertinent to this COVE edition.]