Children's Stories

Par : Oscar Wilde

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  • Nombre de pages166
  • PrésentationBroché
  • Poids0.224 kg
  • Dimensions14,8 cm × 21,0 cm × 0,9 cm
  • ISBN979-10-418-0082-7
  • EAN9791041800827
  • Date de parution15/04/2023
  • ÉditeurCulturea

Résumé

Early in his literary career Oscar Wilde published two collections of children's stories and fairy tales. This edition contains the stories from both The Happy Prince and Other Tales, published in 1888, and A House of Pomegranates, published in 1891. The two books present two slightly different sensibilities, and though stories like "The Happy Prince" and "The Selfish Giant" have grown into timeless children's classics, the darker tales told in A House of Pomegranates remain less well known and were, as Wilde said, "intended neither for the British child nor the British public.
" While Wilde is best known as a playwright and celebrated for his wit and aphorisms, his early writings contain the seeds of his biting criticism of late Victorian society. And this was true no more so than in these fairy stories which explore the ideals of friendship, love, kindness and charity ; the stories both celebrate these attributes and show how they are too often twisted or ignored by the very societies that espouse them.
Early in his literary career Oscar Wilde published two collections of children's stories and fairy tales. This edition contains the stories from both The Happy Prince and Other Tales, published in 1888, and A House of Pomegranates, published in 1891. The two books present two slightly different sensibilities, and though stories like "The Happy Prince" and "The Selfish Giant" have grown into timeless children's classics, the darker tales told in A House of Pomegranates remain less well known and were, as Wilde said, "intended neither for the British child nor the British public.
" While Wilde is best known as a playwright and celebrated for his wit and aphorisms, his early writings contain the seeds of his biting criticism of late Victorian society. And this was true no more so than in these fairy stories which explore the ideals of friendship, love, kindness and charity ; the stories both celebrate these attributes and show how they are too often twisted or ignored by the very societies that espouse them.
Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde est né à Dublin, en Irlande. Son père est chirurgien, sa mère est poétesse et traductrice d'auteurs français (Dumas et Lamartine). Il fait ses études au Trinity College de Dublin puis à Oxford, en Angleterre. Grâce à son élégance et à sa vivacité d'esprit, il devient vite un auteur très apprécié en Grande-Bretagne, mais aussi en France où il est salué par les milieux littéraires. Ses poésies, ses contes, ses histoires, son roman ("Le Portrait de Dorian Gray") et ses pièces de théâtre - dont l'une "Salomé" est écrite en français, est créée par Sarah Bernhardt - assurent son succès. Il est alors reconnu comme le chef de file de ce que l'on a appelé "le culte esthétique" : extrême raffinement, amour exclusif des belles choses, attitude détachée. Mais sa vie bascule en 1895 ; lorsqu'il est condamné à deux ans de travaux forcés dans une Angleterre victorienne très puritaine. Refusant de fuir, il purge sa peine et sort brisé du bagne. Il est désormais un homme ruiné, exclu de la société. Il finit misérablement sa vie à Paris où il meurt le 30 novembre 1900, à 46 ans d'une méningite. Ses derniers mots, dans une chambre d'hôtel au décor miteux (hôtel d'Alsace, 13, rue des Beaux-Arts à Paris) auraient été : "Ou c'est ce papier peint qui disparaît, ou c'est moi".
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