Following Sara Ahmed’s conceptualisation of queer phenomenology, this paper
addresses how a relatively lesser-known short story by Oscar Wilde, “The Portrait of
Mr W.H.” (1889) can be read as an orientation device towards the different artistic
discourses of the past that inform queer culture and historiography.
In the story, a cast of unreliable characters become obsessed with a forgery that attempts
to pass as the original portrait of Shakespeare’s muse: Mr W.H. By positing this portrait
as a point of historic and artistic conflict, the narrative turns its back to heteronormative
realities and (dis)orientates both the characters and the readers, creating a queer effect.