The Commodified Happiness: The Only Established Source of Meaning in Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince and The Nightingale and the Rose

Younes Poorghorban
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Abstract

Abstract Oscar Wilde’s fairy tales are not as well-recognised as his novel or his dramatic works. This paper circles around two of his tales, The Happy Prince and The Nightingale and the Rose. Through a postmodernist outlook, this study postulates the vigorous diatribe of Wilde against the consumer culture which was dominant within Victorian society. Wilde asserts that the Victorian mind-set claims that happiness is attainable through accumulating signs of affluence and he ironically mocks this notion of happiness which is entitled to commodified objects. To him, happiness is defined through a strict sense of Christian morality and Christ-like love and kindness. His aesthetic views are entangled with morality and he fails to celebrate art for art’s sake. Moreover, this study asserts that Wilde is aware of the dominant language games, and his application of the technical language game for the Prince, the Nightingale, and the Swallow is in debt to his monolithic morality or his opportunistic character. At last, Wilde refuses to celebrate beauty if morality is absent and in this way, his aesthetic concerns become rather contradictory.
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商品化的幸福:奥斯卡·王尔德《快乐王子》和《夜莺与玫瑰》中唯一确定的意义来源
奥斯卡·王尔德的童话作品并不像他的小说和戏剧作品那样广为人知。本文围绕他的两个故事——《快乐王子》和《夜莺与玫瑰》展开。通过后现代主义的观点,本研究假设王尔德对维多利亚社会中占主导地位的消费文化进行了激烈的抨击。王尔德认为,维多利亚时代的思维模式认为,幸福可以通过积累富裕的迹象来实现,他讽刺地嘲笑了这种有权获得商品化物品的幸福观念。对他来说,幸福是通过严格意义上的基督教道德和基督般的爱和仁慈来定义的。他的审美观点与道德纠缠在一起,他没有为艺术而赞美艺术。此外,本研究还认为王尔德意识到了主流语言游戏,他在《王子》、《夜莺》和《燕子》中运用了技术性语言游戏,这要归功于他的单一道德或他的机会主义性格。最后,王尔德拒绝在没有道德的情况下赞美美,这样一来,他的审美关注就变得相当矛盾。
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