Bibliographical Shaw
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Bibliographical Shaw
(Shaw : the annual of Bernard Shaw studies / Stanley Weintraub, general editor, v. 20)
Pennsylvania State University Press, c2000
- Other Title
-
A supplement to Bernard Shaw : a bibliography
Bernard Shaw : a bibliograpy
Available at / 6 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
"Including A supplement to Bernard Shaw : a bibliography by Dan H. Laurence" -- on t.p.
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Dedicated to Bernard F. Burgunder, eminent collector of Shaviana, SHAW 20 continues "Mr. B's" legacy by making available new bibliographic information on Shaw, his translations, and major research sources, along with two unpublished Shaw pieces. Representing a prodigious amount of research by a number of people, the volume provides extensive, previously unavailable information that is invaluable to the continuing study of Shaw and his works.
Featured is Dan H. Laurence's "A Supplement to Bernard Shaw: A Bibliography," the first update to be published since Laurence's original publication in 1983 (Soho Bibiographies). Extending his original publication, Laurence faithfully follows the format and style of the Soho edition, provides useful cross-references to the 1983 edition, and includes a selective index. "A Supplement. . ." makes as current as possible information relating to the publishing history of Shaw's works in English.
Also invaluable to scholarship, but not often seen in publication, is the series of investigatory reports, eleven in all, on the history and holdings of major Shaw research sources, written by equally major Shaw scholars, and spanning four nations: England, Ireland, Canada, and the United States. Prominent among the articles is an extensive report by James Tyler on the Burgunder Collection at Cornell University. Beyond these enticing collections is a listing of additional research sources at the end of the section.
Last but hardly least is the bibliography of Shaw's translations in ten major languages and an article on Shaw and his translators by Fred D. Crawford, completed by Dan H. Laurence. Culling the history of translations of Shaw's works in distant countries and in various languages, the bibliography gathers hitherto unavailable publication data, transliterated to English. Preceding the bibliography is a fascinating article on the interactions, intrigues, and inconsistencies that surrounded Shaw's relations with his translators. Given the multiple, complex issues involved, the article invites further research on Shaw's translations as much as it provides a basis for such scholarship.
Additionally, "Bernard Shaw's Further Letters to Siegfried Trebitsch," edited by Samuel A. Weiss, provides evidence, beyond Weiss's fine book-length edition, of the evolution of a relationship between Shaw and his German translator, particularly in the face of World War II enmities between their respective countries and Trebitsch's continued, if at times ill-managed, efforts to put Shaw on the German stage and in the German heart. In Shaw's "A Devil of a Fellow: Self-Criticism," originally published in a German translation by Trebitsch but published in this volume for the first time in its original English text, we hear Shaw "troubling" the Viennese about his introduction "as a dramatic poet to the German-speaking peoples." Shaw explains easily: "I never resist a man who is in earnest." The man was Siegfried Trebitsch.
Also included are corrections and additions to the Collected Letters 1926-1950 by Dan H. Laurence, a review of Leon Hugo's Edwardian Shaw, and John R. Pfeiffer's "Continuing Checklist of Shaviana."
Table of Contents
Contents
CODES AND ABBREVIATIONS viii
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SHAW: A PERSONAL NOTE 1
A SUPPLEMENT TO BERNARD SHAW: A BIBLIOGRAPHY 3
Dan H. Laurence
Selective Index to "A Supplement . . ." 125
1. THE BURGUNDER COLLECTION AT CORNELL 129
James Tyier
2. SOME PRINCIPAL SHAW RESEARCH SOURCES
I . Charles A. Berst: THE DWIGHT V. STRONG COLLECTION 137
II. L. W. Conolly: THE UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH COLLECTIONS 141
III. T. F. Evans: THE FABIAN SOCIETY ARCHIVE 145
IV. Ann L. Ferguson: THE RICHARD S. WEINER COLLECTION 148
V. Nicholas Grene: THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF IRELAND 152
VI. Dan H. Laurence: THE LIBRARY AT SHAW'S CORNER 157
VII. Daniel Leary: THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY COLLECTIONS 160
VIII. Margery Morgan: THE SHAW BUSINESS PAPERS 164
IX. Sarah Wadsworth: THE ARCHIBALD HENDERSON COLLECTION 169
X. Stanley Weintraub: THE LAFAYETTE. L. BUTLER COLLECTION 173
XI. ADDITIONAL SOURCES 176
3. SHAW IN TRANSLATION
Fred D. Crawford
I: THE TRANSLATORS 177
II: THE TRANSLATIONS 197
Czech Italian
Danish Polish
French Russian
German Spanish
Hungarian Swedish
4. BERNARD SHAW'S FURTHER LETTERS TO SIEGFRIED
TREBITSCH 221
Edited by Samuel A. Weiss
5. [A DEVIL OF A FELLOW: SELF-CRITICISM] 247
Bernard Shaw
6. CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS: COLLECTED LETTERS
1926-1950 253
Dan H. Laurence
REVIEW 257
Shaw and the Edwardian Age (Edwardian Shaw: The Writer and His Age by Leon Hugo)
Daniel Leary
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 263
A CONTINUING CHECKLIST OF SHAVIANA 265
John R. Pfeiffer
NOTICES 291
CONTRIBUTORS 293
by "Nielsen BookData"