Réponse Courte

Solutions simples

Quelle est la specificite de Dorian Gray?

Quelle est la spécificité de Dorian Gray?

Dorian Gray est un jeune dandy d’une grande beauté, perpétuellement en quête de plaisirs. Lorsqu’il aperçoit le portrait que son ami Basil Hallward a fait de lui, il fait le vœu d’être toujours semblable à cette image de jeunesse rayonnante.

Pourquoi le Portrait de Dorian Gray est un roman philosophique?

Un conte philosophique et fantastique Le Portrait de Dorian Gray est un roman d’apprentissage qui jour sur deux registres : Le fantastique : dans l’intrigue, l’élément du portrait qui vieillit à la place du modèle est au service du message philosophique que veut délivrer Oscar Wilde.

Qui peint le portrait de Dorian Gray?

Oscar Wilde
Le Portrait de Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde, Vladimir Volkoff | Livre de Poche.

LIRE AUSSI:   Que contient l’ammoniac dans l’eau?

Qui a peint le portrait de Dorian Gray?

Who is Basil Hallward?

Basil Hallward is a talented, though somewhat conventionally minded, painter. His love for Dorian Gray changes the way he sees art; indeed, it defines a new school of expression for him. Basil’s portrait of Dorian marks a new phase of his career.

How does Basil Hallward feel about right and wrong?

Basil Hallward. Basil is the only central character with a sense of right and wrong. For a long time he refuses to believe that his friends can commit an evil action, and while he cheerfully warns Dorian about Lord Henry’s bad influence, he also assumes that Lord Henry’s cynicism is ‘simply a pose’ (p. 7).

What does Basil’s commitment to Dorian reveal?

Basil’s commitment to Dorian, which ultimately proves fatal, reveals the genuineness of his love for his favorite subject and his concern for the safety and salvation of Dorian’s soul.

Why does Lord Henry dismiss Basil as a bore?

LIRE AUSSI:   Quand est-ce que la serie est renouvelee?

This fits his friend’s self-effacing nature: only in Basil’s absence can his moral strictures begin to be heard. At the close of the novel Lord Henry dismisses Basil as a ‘bore’ and his work as ‘that curious mixture of bad painting and good intentions that always entitles a man to be called a representative British artist’ (p. 169).