SOUSA, L. L.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6894618352716420; SOUSA, Larissa Lacerda de.
Résumé:
Postcolonial criticism offers an analytical perspective that allows us to reflect, also from the
literature, how different peoples and nations involved by Colonialism and its imperialist
practice are portrayed. From this, we can observe both literary texts that subvert the imperial
logic, as texts that reproduce it, analyzing the aspects of this context, such as othering. As
England was during the nineteenth century the greatest colonizing empire in the world,
English literature, especially from this period, therefore, has many reflections of this scenario
and served both to criticize it and to propagate the supposed superiority of the English. The
portrait of Dorian Gray, written by the Irishman Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) and published in
1891, in the end of the Victorian Age, is analyzed through the postcolonial perspective. The
main objective is to demonstrate how the narrator and the characters present marks of the
imperial mentality and how the othering influences the description of the characters and the
spaces, also adding the gender relations in the work and the double colonization of the
woman. It is a bibliographical and analytical research and the main authors used for the
theoretical foundation of this research are: Bonnici (2000, 2005), Dias (2015), Holland
(1991), Parra (2012), Said (2007, 2011).