The Critic/Artist in Oscar Wilde
Author : Yi-ching Teng
Keywords : Oscar Wilde, Critic as Artist, Criticism as Art, Self-Writing, Michel Foucault
This essay aims to rethink and reimagine the critic/artist in Oscar
Wilde from the standpoints of criticism as a self-writing and as an art of the
self. By appropriating and exploring the discursive possibilities created by
and around Michel Foucault, particularly the ethical and aesthetic discourse
that Foucault elaborates, I attempt to see and recast in a new light the traces
and tracts of textual existence of the critic as artist—what is crucial to Oscar
Wilde’s anachronistic, synthetic perspective towards art and life. Textual
analysis will be centered on apparently equivocal, miscellaneous passages,
notably in The Critic as Artist, Wilde’s major critical work. Baptized in Hel-
lenistic ethical imagination, Wilde’s constant returns to the conceptualiza-
tion or practices of “artist/critic,” “self-culture(/creation)” and “life as a work
of art” invite further thinking with Foucault’s (re)search of “aesthetics of
existence” both in ancient Greece and modern times. Effectively, for Wilde,
the question of the (transformation of the) self (and/or subject) emerges
gradually and becomes crucial to his thinking. In his writings, the self, treat-
ed paradoxically and under different disguises, appears as a linguistic, plastic
construction incessantly menaced and torn between the past and the pres-
ent, fiction and reality, internal and external forces in an ongoing pursuit
of the highest form of individuality, critical as well as artistic. Hence, while
identifying the dispersing and diverging details, the déviations, this essay at-
tempts also to enlarge the field of investigation beyond the traditional image of critic, thereby to (re)dis-cover the metatextual, transtextual concerns of
self/writing, life/existence and aesthetics/ethics, the concerns, both ancient
and modern, that continuously haunt Wilde’s imagination and yet are dislo-
cated and masked in the intricate textual layers, drives, and dynamisms.