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  1. Influenced through general exposure but also direct contact, the leading decadent figures in Britain associated with decadence were Irish writer Oscar Wilde, poet Algernon Charles Swinburne, and illustrator Aubrey Beardsley, as well as other artists and writers associated with The Yellow Book.

  2. The Decadent movement was most popular in France, but there are examples of authors exhibiting the traits of the “decadents” worldwide. This includes Oscar Wilde in Britain, Robert W. Chambers in America, and Valery Yakovlevich Bryusov in Russia.

  3. He was a spokesman for the late 19th-century Aesthetic movement in England, which advocated art for art’s sake, and he was the object of celebrated civil and criminal suits involving homosexuality and ending in his imprisonment (1895–97). Understanding Oscar Wilde: His life, works, and death.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Aestheticism, late 19th-century European arts movement which centred on the doctrine that art exists for the sake of its beauty alone, and that it need serve no political, didactic, or other purpose. The movement began in reaction to prevailing utilitarian social philosophies and to what was.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Feb 16, 2021 · Applied to Wilde’s decadent outlook, this sense of failure would translate in terms of a ‘step down’ in terms of a movement off the right path, of losing contact with one’s moral tradition so as to allow passive indulgence and a problematic de-centring of language.

    • Harald Pittel
    • 2021
  6. Oscar Wilde emerged in late nineteenth century London as the living embodiment of the Aesthetic movement. He won fame as a dramatist, poet and novelist whose ideas on art, beauty and personal freedom formed a formidable challenge to Victorian puritanicalism.

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  8. Jun 12, 2014 · The story was described as 'effeminate', 'unmanly' and - most damningly of all in the opinion of the British press - openly French in its aesthetic. Nothing, in late-Victorian conservative opinion, reeked quite so potently of filthy decadent practices as French literature.

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