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Stood Ever Woman So Alone?

Woman Alone, from the series: The Dancing Pair Vigano
Johann Gottfried Schadow (1764–1850)

[The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 49.21.90]

OSCAR WILDE ON SEXUAL POLITICS


If we wish to gauge our men of the past, should we not determine on which side of history they stand? Or is that presentism?

To help you decide, take the political rights of women, for instance. At the time of the suffragist movement in Britain, women were second-class citizens under the law. One honorable gentleman in the House of Commons asked, “is the House prepared to hand over the government of this country to women, the majority of whom…do not understand the responsibilities of life?”

This was a view that resounded to the crown of the establishment. In 1907, King Edward VII wrote to the Liberal Prime Minister, Henry Campbell-Bannerman: “I rejoice to see that you put your foot down regarding the Channel Tunnel…I only wish you could have done the same regarding Female Suffrage. The conduct of the so-called Suffragettes has really been so outrageous and does their cause (for which I have no sympathy) much harm.”

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Article

Guido Ferranti

duschess
A rediscovered letter by Oscar Wilde informs his relationship with anonymity

Wilde’s college exploits, his aesthetic entry into London society, the self-publicity of his American tour, and his pursuit of fame have all been well documented; and the story often distills to the crucial moment of his fall from grace, a short period in 1895 when fame turned to infamy.

But there is a more enduring, more subtle, and underlying theme that began with Wilde’s desire for the opposite: a journey through his art and life towards an imperative for anonymity.

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