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Oscar Wilde Shades of Yellow:Representations ofChangeand Decay in Victorian Literature The Picture ofDorian Gray,the Double,and Victorian views of Suicide Wilde's Salome and the Victorian Religious Landscape The Problem ofthe Jewish Manager in The Picture of Dorian Gray The Great Social Evil:Acton,"The Harlot's House,"and Prostitutes in Victorian London Self-Censorship and Ravishing Athena Oscar Wilde's"The Sphinx"and Victorian Egyptomania IV.Characterization Narcissus and Echo 10 In The Picture ofDorian Gray,thereareat least four specific references to Narcissus(pp.3,105,114,&128) The myth ofhim and Echo reveals a further facet of Dorian's encounter with Sibyl Vane.Ovid's portrait of Echo represents one ofthe earliest and most powerfully conveyed examples ofunrestrained female sexuality inOscar Wilde • Shades of Yellow: Representations of Change and Decay in Victorian Literature • The Picture of Dorian Gray, the Double, and Victorian views of Suicide • Wilde's Salomé and the Victorian Religious Landscape • The Problem of the Jewish Manager in The Picture of Dorian Gray • The Great Social Evil: Acton, “The Harlot’s House,” and Prostitutes in Victorian London • Self-Censorship and Ravishing Athena • Oscar Wilde’s “The Sphinx” and Victorian Egyptomania IV. Characterization Narcissus and Echo • In The Picture of Dorian Gray, there are at least four specific references to Narcissus (pp. 3, 105, 114, & 128). The myth of him and Echo reveals a further facet of Dorian's encounter with Sibyl Vane. Ovid's portrait of Echo represents one of the earliest and most powerfully conveyed examples of unrestrained female sexuality in 10’
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