THE AUTHOR, WHO DIED 125 YEARS AGO TODAY, DEFENDED THE CREATIVE FREE INDIVIDUAL
AGAINST ALL FORMS OF SOCIETAL TYRANNY
~ Maurice Schuhmann ~
On November 30, 1900, the Irish author, poet and playwright Oscar Wilde (b.1854)
passed away in exile in Paris. His grave in the prestigious Père Lachaise
Cemetery, where the Ukrainian anarchist Nestor Makhno as well as Karl Marx’s
son-in-law Paul Lafargue and his wife Laura also rest, has, like the grave of
Doors frontman Jim Morrison, become a kind of pilgrimage site for fans.
Wilde was forced into exile in 1897, immediately after his release from Reading
prison. The reasons were social, legal, and personal, making life in England
practically impossible. He died completely impoverished in a run-down hotel in
Paris’s 6th arrondissement. Prior to that, he had been sentenced to two years of
hard labour – the maximum punishment at the time for homosexuality, “the love
that dare not speak its name.” He processed his time in prison in two works: De
Profundis and The Ballad of Reading Gaol. While the former is a very personal,
essentially apolitical text, the latter contains a political dimension. His
ballad is a poetic, socially critical indictment of the penal system and an
expression of human solidarity, making it relevant to anarchist critiques of
incarceration.
The phrase “the love that dare not speak its name,” which he used in his famous
courtroom speech and which did not serve to exonerate him, was shortly
thereafter taken up by the German-Scottish anarchist John Henry Mackay. Writing
under the pseudonym Sagitta, Mackay published his Books of the Nameless Love,
initiating a tradition of homoerotic literature in Germany (from a contemporary
perspective, Mackay’s works must be critically assessed, as they include, among
other content, paedophilic passages).
Photo: Jim Linwood on Flickr CC-BY-2.0
Oscar Wilde was, at heart, an anarchist because he defended the free, creative
individual against all forms of societal tyranny. This is essentially what Emma
Goldman stated in her essay The Social Significance of the Modern Drama. She
referred to his text The Soul of Man under Socialism, seeing in it a consistent
defense of anarchist individualism. It is therefore hardly surprising that
Goldman – heavily influenced at the time by Friedrich Nietzsche and Max Stirner
– translated this text into German using Stirnerian and Nietzschean vocabulary.
This translation continues to be reissued in the German-speaking world today and
shapes the interpretation referenced by Emma Goldman.
In The Soul of Man under Socialism, Wilde argues that true individual freedom is
only possible in a society that prioritises creativity, self-realisation, and
voluntary cooperation over property and coercion. He criticises both capitalism
and charitable philanthropy, as both perpetuate rather than eliminate poverty.
The state appears to him as the central force of oppression, preventing the
individual from realising their artistic and moral potential. Wilde therefore
does not conceive of socialism as state control, but as a system that provides
all people with leisure and freedom to engage creatively. Such liberation from
property constraints and poverty, in his view, would lead to greater
individuality, increased happiness, and a truly humane society.
The words that precede this work – “A map of the world that does not include
Utopia is not worth even glancing at.” – are likely the most frequently quoted
lines from Wilde’s entire oeuvre and continue to fascinate not only anarchists.
On the anniversary of his death, it is once again a good occasion to revisit his
works from an anarchist perspective – and not just The Picture of Dorian Gray.
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Top photo: William Murphy CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
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