Dorian Gray And A Visit From The Goon

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Compare and contrast the representation of the passage of Time in two texts on the module.

In many works of literature, Time is personified as its own character, either working with or against persons within the novel’s. It is confusing and indefinable but nevertheless it is inescapable. Time plays a central role in both Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray and Egan’s A Visit from the Goon Squad as both novels try to defeat it by using or because of art. This is important because it represents the power that Time has over all other characters and the techniques used to and defeat it are constantly in vain. From the definitions found online, using the idea that Time is “the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, …show more content…

Basil from ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’ uses art to immortalise Dorian, therefore, trying to defeat Time not for himself but for the one he admires and Olaussen argues that ‘most prominent conclusion drawn by most literary critics is that Basil is infatuated with Dorian’. It is true that Dorian’s beauty is much more than simply aesthetic to the artist, but gives him the inspiration to ‘recreate life in a way that was hidden from [him] before’. From this, it is clear that the wish made by Dorian to the painting was only part of the reason that his prayer was answered, and that Basil’s true love and admiration for his subject seemed to breathe life into the work. Without Basil and his ‘abstract sense of beauty’, Dorian would not have been so moved by Lord Henry’s words as the painting leads him to think of the future, of becoming ‘dreadful, hideous, and uncouth’. This idea that Basil successfully immortalises Dorian and therefore defeats Time is thwarted by his death at the hands of the very thing he tried to protect from it. Basil seems to be the only character in Wilde’s novel that successfully realises the true power of Time, by asking Dorian if he can ‘see the accursed thing leering at [them]’. This statement, although seemingly alluding to the awful face in his own painting, seems more fitting of describing Time instead. Basil can see the personification of Time ‘leering’ down at them from the canvas, and sees all that Dorian has become. His mistake, however, is believing that there is still a chance at salvation for Dorian, to make his soul ‘as white as snow’ rather than accepting the fate that Time has befallen on his beloved friend. By trying to defeat Time, Basil seals his own fate at the hands of Dorian, highlighting the true power of Time as its own character, who, if challenged, seemingly takes vengeance on those who oppose

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