Shaw and feminisms : on stage and off

Author(s)

    • Hadfield, D.A.
    • Reynolds, Jean
    • Weintraub, Rodelle

Bibliographic Information

Shaw and feminisms : on stage and off

edited by D.A. Hadfield and Jean Reynolds ; foreword by Rodelle Weintraub

(The Florida Bernard Shaw series)

University Press of Florida, c2013

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

When offstage actions contradict a playwright's onstage message, literary study gets messy. In his personal relationships, George Bernard Shaw was often ambivalent toward liberated women-surprisingly so, considering his reputation as one of the first champions of women's rights. His private attitudes sit uncomfortably beside his public philosophies that were so foundational to first-wave feminism. Here, Shaw's long-recognised influence on feminism is re-examined through the lens of twenty-first-century feminist thought as well as previously unpublished primary sources. New links appear between Shaw's writings and his gendered notions of physicality, pain, performance, nationalism, authorship, and politics. The book's archival material includes previously unpublished Shaw correspondence and excerpts from the works of his feminist playwright contemporaries. Shaw and Feminisms explores Shaw's strong female characters, his real-life involvement with women, and his continuing impact on theatre and politics today.

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