230- ] English Literature
George Bernard Shaw
George
Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950), known at his insistence as
Bernard Shaw, was an Irish playwright, critic, polemicist and political
activist. His influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from
the 1880s to his death and beyond. He wrote more than sixty plays, including
major works such as Man and Superman (1902), Pygmalion (1913) and Saint Joan
(1923). With a range incorporating both contemporary satire and historical
allegory, Shaw became the leading dramatist of his generation , and in 1925 was
awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Born
in Dublin, in 1876 Shaw moved to London, where he struggled to establish
himself as a writer and novelist, and embarked on a rigorous process of
self-education. By the mid-1880s he had become a respected theatre and music
critic. Following a political awakening, he joined the gradualist Fabian
Society and became its most prominent pamphleteer. Shaw had been writing plays
for years before his first public success, Arms and the Man in 1894. Influenced
by Henrik Ibsen, he sought to introduce a new realism into English-language
drama, using his plays as vehicles to disseminate his political, social and
religious ideas. By the early twentieth century his reputation as a dramatist
was secured with a series of critical and popular successes that included Major
Barbara, The Doctor's Dilemma, and Caesar and Cleopatra.
Shaw's
expressed views were often contentious; he promoted eugenics and alphabet
reform , and opposed vaccination and organised religion. He courted unpopularity
by denouncing both sides in the First World War as equally culpable, and
although not a republican, castigated British policy on Ireland in the postwar
period. These stances had no lasting effect on his standing or productivity as
a dramatist; the inter-war years saw a series of often ambitious plays, which
achieved varying degrees of popular success. In 1938 he provided the screenplay
for a filmed version of Pygmalion for which he received an Academy Award. His
appetite for politics and controversy remained undiminished; by the late 1920s,
he had largely renounced Fabian Society gradualism, and often wrote and spoke
favourably of dictatorships of the right and left—he expressed admiration for
both Mussolini and Stalin. In the final decade of his life, he made fewer
public statements but continued to write prolifically until shortly before his
death, aged ninety-four, having refused all state honours, including the Order
of Merit in 1946.
Since
Shaw's death scholarly and critical opinion about his works has varied, but he
has regularly been rated among British dramatists as second only to
Shakespeare; analysts recognise his extensive influence on generations of
English-language playwrights. The word Shavian has entered the language as
encapsulating Shaw's ideas and his means of expressing them.
Life
Early years
Shaw
was born at 3 Upper Synge Street in Portobello, a lower-middle-class part of
Dublin.[2] He was the youngest child and only son of George Carr Shaw and
Lucinda Elizabeth (Bessie) Shaw (née Gurly). His elder siblings were Lucinda
(Lucy) Frances and Elinor Agnes. The Shaw family was of English descent and
belonged to the dominant Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland; George Carr Shaw, an
ineffectual alcoholic, was among the family's less successful members. His
relatives secured him a sinecure in the civil service, from which he was
pensioned off in the early 1850s; thereafter he worked irregularly as a corn
merchant. In 1852 he married Bessie Gurly; in the view of Shaw's biographer
Michael Holroyd she married to escape a tyrannical great-aunt. If, as Holroyd
and others surmise, George's motives were mercenary, then he was disappointed,
as Bessie brought him little of her family's money. She came to despise her
ineffectual and often drunken husband, with whom she shared what their son
later described as a life of "shabby-genteel poverty".
By
the time of Shaw's birth his mother had become close to George John Lee, a
flamboyant figure well known in Dublin's musical circles. Shaw retained a
lifelong obsession that Lee might have been his biological father; there is no
consensus among Shavian scholars on the likelihood of this. The young Shaw
suffered no harshness from his mother, but he later recalled that her
indifference and lack of affection hurt him deeply. He found solace in the
music that abounded in the house. Lee was a conductor and teacher of singing;
Bessie had a fine mezzo-soprano voice and was much influenced by Lee's
unorthodox method of vocal production. The Shaws' house was often filled with
music, with frequent gatherings of singers and players.
In
1862 Lee and the Shaws agreed to share a house, No. 1 Hatch Street, in an
affluent part of Dublin, and a country cottage on Dalkey Hill, overlooking
Killiney Bay. Shaw, a sensitive boy, found the less salubrious parts of Dublin
shocking and distressing, and was happier at the cottage. Lee's students often
gave him books, which the young Shaw read avidly; thus, as well as gaining a
thorough musical knowledge of choral and operatic works, he became familiar
with a wide spectrum of literature.
Between
1865 and 1871 Shaw attended four schools, all of which he hated. His
experiences as a schoolboy left him disillusioned with formal education:
"Schools and schoolmasters", he later wrote, were "prisons and
turnkeys in which children are kept to prevent them disturbing and chaperoning
their parents." In October 1871 he left school to become a junior clerk in
a Dublin firm of land agents, where he worked hard, and quickly rose to become
head cashier. During this period, Shaw was known as "George Shaw";
after 1876, he dropped the "George" and styled himself "Bernard
Shaw".
In
June 1873 Lee left Dublin for London and never returned. A fortnight later,
Bessie followed him; the two girls joined her. Shaw's explanation of why his
mother followed Lee was that without the latter's financial contribution the
joint household had to be broken up. Left in Dublin with his father, Shaw
compensated for the absence of music in the house by teaching himself to play
the piano.
London
Early
in 1876 Shaw learned from his mother that Agnes was dying of tuberculosis. He
resigned from the land agents, and in March travelled to England to join his
mother and Lucy at Agnes's funeral. He never again lived in Ireland, and did
not visit it for twenty-nine years.
Initially,
Shaw refused to seek clerical employment in London. His mother allowed him to
live free of charge in her house in South Kensington, but he nevertheless
needed an income. He had abandoned a teenage ambition to become a painter, and
had not yet thought of writing for a living, but Lee found a little work for
him, ghost-writing a musical column printed under Lee's name in a satirical
weekly, The Hornet. Lee's relations with Bessie deteriorated after their move
to London. Shaw maintained contact with Lee, who found him work as a rehearsal
pianist and occasional singer
Eventually
Shaw was driven to applying for office jobs. In the interim he secured a
reader's pass for the British Museum Reading Room (the forerunner of the
British Library) and spent most weekdays there, reading and writing. His first
attempt at drama, begun in 1878, was a blank-verse satirical piece on a
religious theme. It was abandoned unfinished, as was his first try at a novel.
His first completed novel, Immaturity (1879), was too grim to appeal to
publishers and did not appear until the 1930s. He was employed briefly by the
newly formed Edison Telephone Company in 1879–80 and, as in Dublin, achieved
rapid promotion. Nonetheless, when the Edison firm merged with the rival Bell
Telephone Company, Shaw chose not to seek a place in the new organisation.
Thereafter he pursued a full-time career as an author.
For
the next four years Shaw made a negligible income from writing, and was
subsidised by his mother. In 1881, for the sake of economy, and increasingly as
a matter of principle, he became a vegetarian.[6] In the same year he suffered
an attack of smallpox; eventually he grew a beard to hide the resultant facial
scar. In rapid succession he wrote two more novels: The Irrational Knot (1880)
and Love Among the Artists (1881), but neither found a publisher; each was
serialised a few years later in the socialist magazine Our Corner.
In
1880 Shaw began attending meetings of the Zetetical Society, whose objective
was to "search for truth in all matters affecting the interests of the
human race". Here he met Sidney Webb, a junior civil servant who, like
Shaw, was busy educating himself. Despite difference of style and temperament,
the two quickly recognised qualities in each other and developed a lifelong
friendship. Shaw later reflected: "You knew everything that I didn't know
and I knew everything you didn't know ... We had everything to learn from one
another and brains enough to do it".
Shaw's
next attempt at drama was a one-act playlet in French, Un Petit Drame, written
in 1884 but not published in his lifetime. In the same year the critic William
Archer suggested a collaboration, with a plot by Archer and dialogue by Shaw.
The project foundered, but Shaw returned to the draft as the basis of Widowers'
Houses in 1892, and the connection with Archer proved of immense value to
Shaw's career.
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