What Shaw Really Wrote About the War (Florida Bernard Shaw)
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Author
Contributions
- Daniel O'Leary (Editor) - Contributor
Publication
2006-06-30 - University Press of Florida
Language
English
Word Count
77,250 words, Guess
Page Count
309 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL8021972M
- ISBN-139780813029603
- ISBN-100813029600
- OCLC Control Number62755667
- OCLC Control Numberwhatshawreallywr0000shaw
and 2 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2005058242
- Goodreads275262
Classifications
- LCCPR5361 .W57 2006
Description
In Wisenthal and O'Leary's What Shaw Really Wrote About the War, Bernard Shaw speaks for himself--revealing his passionate views of World War I as neither unpatriotic nor pacifist. Aiming to correct misconceptions and explore the complexity of Shaw's wartime journalism, the editors have assembled the first annotated collection of his writings about the war, including What I Wrote About the War (1914),the previously unpublished More Common Sense About the War (1915), and What I Said in the Great War (1918). This landmark volume also includes an important piece called Peace Conference Hints, Shaw's unsolicited advice to the Allies at the end of the war. In addition, the authors draw parallels to Shaw's "theatre of war," noting how his attitudes about war infused his plays, including Heartbreak House and the Back to Methusaleh cycle he began to write during this period. "Shaw seems to be one of the belligerents in the War himself," the editors argue, "enjoying the use of his verbal firepower in his pugnacious campaign against politicians' ineptitude and his audience's fatal misunderstandings of what is going on." Essential reading for Shaw scholars and still relevant today, his work speaks to anyone who exercises the right to ask questions and voice objections in times of war.
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