|
. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
A Bulletin for George Bernard
Shaw |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
JUNE
2008 |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
Click |
||||||||||
|
Clicking
|
||||||||||
|
The
sign @ connects to an e-mail address. |
||||||||||
|
Note: Subscribers to Shavings have their names printed in bold,
and can
be contacted through us at oscholars@gmail.com. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
1.
Editorial |
||||||||||
|
Shavings
is published at irregular intervals, dependent upon the accumulation
of material. Chronologically, this is
the seventh issue of Shavings to appear on www.oscholars.com and the sixth for
which we are joined by our Associate Editor for Shavings,
Barbara Pfeifer of the |
||||||||||
|
Readers of Shavings
may participate in the discussion forum set up for all readers of the oscholars
group of journals by clicking its icon |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
2. The Plays |
||||||||||
|
In this section we try especially but not
exclusively to cover productions of Shaw's pre-1901 plays, and news of
productions of these (with offers of review) will be most welcome. The
plays are Arms and the Man (1894), Cæsar and Cleopatra (1898),
Candida (1895), Captain Brassbound's Conversion (1899), The
Devil's Disciple (1897),The Man of Destiny (1895), Mrs Warren's
Profession (1893),The Philanderer (1893), Widowers' Houses
(1892), You Never Can Tell (1895). (Dates of composition, not
first performance.) Wilde is known to have attended the first
night of Arms and the Man ( |
||||||||||
|
We have been improving our coverage, and can now be more active in commissioning reviews. This page has been growing, and as with all our journals, an amoeba like fission has become necessary. This is still experimental, but we are putting this section on a separate page. The features on this page also include links to reviews when we have them. |
||||||||||
|
To reach it, click GBS |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
3. SHAWLINES |
||||||||||
|
In this section we print all the news that
we find or, better still, are sent. We especially welcome news of Shaw
on curricula. |
||||||||||
|
We also wish especially to record articles and papers relating to the
earlier Shaw, and news of new editions of Cashel Byron's Profession (1886), An Unsocial Socialist (1887), The Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891), The Perfect Wagnerite (1898), Love Among the Artists (1900), as well as other related material. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
a. Conferences, Seminars,
Lectures and Calls for Papers |
||||||||||
. |
||||||||||
|
SHAW
SEMINAR IN BRIONI, June 2008:
For information, please click here. If interested, please email dietrich@cas.usf.edu. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
b. Exposing Shaw |
||||||||||
. |
||||||||||
|
‘Facing the Late Victorians: Portraits of Writers and
Artists’ from the Mark Samuels Lasner Collection, an exhibition which was on
view at the Grolier Club in New York from 21st February to 26th April,
included two portraits of GBS, a photograph by Emery Walker and the
lithograph by William Rothenstein. The
exhibition was curated by Margaret D.
Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies at the |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
c. Publications & Papers |
||||||||||
. |
||||||||||
|
‘A
Dramatist for All Seasons: George Bernard Shaw in |
||||||||||
|
‘Performing the Ideal: Film Adaptations of Shaw's Pygmalion' is the name of a paper
being given by Susan J. Wolfe
& Roberta N. Rude at the
conference Cultures of Translation:
Adaptation in Film and Performance, University of Glamorgan, Cardiff, 26th-28th June
2008. For an abstract of this paper, please click |
||||||||||
|
‘Face to face in
word and translation: playing with words and playing with accents in two
scenes by Oscar Wilde and G. B. Shaw’ is the name of a paper being given by
Julie Vatain at the conference Théâtres
français et irlandais: influences et interactions / French and Irish Theatres : Influences and
interactions, University
of Lille III, 13th-14th June 2008. |
||||||||||
|
‘The Aesthetics of Shaw’s Plays’ is the name of a paper being given by Rosalie Rahal Haddad at the conference Home and Elsewhere: the Spaces of Irish Writing, |
||||||||||
|
‘An idiot in an absurd country: recontextualizing Bernard
Shaw’s Simpleton in a contemporary
tropical landscape’ is the
name of a paper being given by Domingos
Nunez at the conference Home and
Elsewhere: the Spaces of Irish Writing, University of Porto, 28th July –1st
August 2008. For an
abstract of this paper, please click |
||||||||||
|
The following papers were given at the Comparative Drama
Conference in |
||||||||||
|
Charles Joseph Del Dotto (Duke University): ‘Idealism Modernism Manifesto: Shaw's Quintessence of Ibsenism and the Avant-Garde’; Christopher Innes (University of Toronto), Brigitte Bogar (University of Toronto): ‘Shaw–The Stage Icon’; Gulbun Onur (Selcuk University): ‘The Hollowness of Social Conventions in Pygmalion and Kozalar’; P.S.Sri (Royal Military College of Canada): ‘Un-Shavian Endings: Pygmalion (1913) and My Fair Lady (1956); Dilek Zerenler (Selcuk University): ‘Illusion and Realilty in Pygmalion and Kozalar’; Amanda Cuellar (University of Texas at El Paso): ‘The Faces of Oppression in Saint Joan’; Julie Sparks (San Jose State University): ‘Shaw's African Girl Extends Her Search: Ed Shockley's The Oracle’; Tony Stafford (University of Texas at El Paso): ‘Postmodern Elements in Shaw's Misalliance’. |
||||||||||
|
In our last issue we were very pleased to publish a Bibliography of
Shaw 2007/8 compiled by Barbara
Pfeifer, Associate Editor of Shavings. This forms a supplement to the journal, and
will be updated with each issue of Shavings. For this issue we have added a list of
writings on Shaw form Chinese journals compiled by Professor Linda Pui-Ling Wong. We welcome contributions,
which will of course be credited. |
||||||||||
|
Methuen Drama is publishing the first scholarly editions
of Shaw's five most popular plays – Pygmalion,
Mrs Warren's Profession, Arms and the Man, Major Barbara and St Joan – this summer. The
plays will be part of Methuen Drama's New Mermaids series, and will all be
£8.99 paperbacks. The series editor is
edited by the Canadian scholar Leonard Conolly. |
||||||||||
|
SHAW The Annual of Bernard Shaw Studies |
||||||||||
|
CALL FOR ARTICLES: SHAW 30 will be edited by Peter Gahan and devoted to ‘Shaw and
the Irish Literary Tradition’. |
||||||||||
|
‘A major dramatist in the tradition of Western literary theatre, Bernard Shaw occupies an uneasy position in the Irish literary pantheon. SHAW 30 will reassess and relocate Shaw and his political and dramatic writing within the context of Irish literature, especially that key play in the Shaw canon, John Bull's Other Island.’ |
||||||||||
|
Inquiries and manuscript submissions should be sent by the
end of December
2008 to guest |
||||||||||
|
Suggested topics for articles: Shaw and the 18th century Irish comic imagination: Swift, Goldsmith, and Sterne; Shaw and Anglo-Irish Restoration comedy (Congreve, Farquhar, Goldsmith, and; Sheridan).; Shaw, Boucicault, and the stage Irish-man; Shaw and the Dublin Theatre (1856-76); Language and Accent (Pygmalion): Shaw, Lecky, and the Gaelic revival; Irish writers and the New Journalism in London 1880-1900 (Lady Wilde, A.P. Graves, T.P. O'Connor, Frank Harris, Shaw, Wilde, Lady Colin Campbell, etc.); Bedford Park, the 1894 Avenue Theatre season, and the Irish Literary; Theatre: young Shaw and Yeats; ‘The Celtic School’ in 1890s London: Wilde and Shaw; Shaw's Abbey plays: John Bull's Other Island, The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet, Glimpse of Reality, and O'Flaherty V.C.; Shaw's other Irish Plays: plays written in Ireland (from Major Barbara to Saint Joan) 1905-1923; Production history and reception of Shaw plays in Ireland; Irish Disparities 1: Shaw and Synge.; Alter-egos: Shaw and Joyce (exile in John Bull and A Portrait, Ulysses, and; Exiles); Shaw and the Abbey after Synge's death 1909-17; Shaw and Lady Gregory-‘the Irish Molière’; Shaw's Irish journalism: Shaw, AE, and Horace Plunkett; Yeats and Shaw: a Working Friendship; Yeats's Robert Gregory poems & Shaw; The Great War: Heartbreak House, O'Flaherty V.C., O'Casey's Silver Tassie; and Frank McGuiness's Observe the Sons of Ulster; Saint Joan: an Irish play?; Shaw and O'Casey; Irish Disparities 2: Shaw and Beckett; Shaw, Charlotte Shaw and Edith Somerville; Shaw at The Gate Theatre, Dublin, and the Gate playwrights (production of Methuselah; Denis Johnston etc.); Shaw and Ulster: playwrights from St. John Ervine to Stewart Parker; John Bull's Other Island and Brian Friel's Translations and Dancing at Lunghasa; Shaw and Tom Murphy's Gigli Concert and Bailegangaire: Opera and Story; Shaw and Modern Irish Comic Theatre: Hugh Leonard, Bernard Farrell, Roddy Doyle; Shaw, Marina Carr, and the Greeks.; Shaw and the early 21st century Irish theatre revival (Sebastian Barry, Martin McDonagh,; Conor McPherson). |
||||||||||
|
Volume 27, 2007 has been
published. We must at once dash your
hopes of actually reaching the articles in PDF as the ToC promises: you will
be directed only to the first paragraph.
The rest is kept locked away by Project Muse. |
|
|||||||||
|
CONTENTS |
||||||||||
|
Crawford, MaryAnn
Krajnik. Pharand, Michel W. : Introduction:
The Evolution of Shavian Consciousness
Access
article in PDF |
Shaw, Bernard,
1856-1950. On Architecture [Access
article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Weintraub, Stanley, 1929- King Magnus and King Minus: A Play and a Playlet Access article in PDF |
Gibbs, A. M. (Anthony Matthews), 1933- G.B.S. and ‘The Law of Change’ [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Meisel, Martin. Shaw, Stoppard, and ‘Audible
Intelligibility’ Access
article in PDF |
Grene, Nicholas. Shaw and Conversion [Access
article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Pharand, Michel W. Getting Published: Grant Richards and the Shaw Book Access article in PDF |
Senelick, Laurence. ‘More Looked at than Listened To’: Shaw on the Pre-revolutionary Russian Stage [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Pfeifer, Barbara. A Dramatist for All Seasons: Bernard Shaw in
|
Ritschel, Nelson O'Ceallaigh, 1959- Shaw, Connolly, and the Irish Citizen Army [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Carpenter, Charles A. The Strategy and the Bacteriology: Scrutinizing the Microbe in Shaw's Too True to Be Good Access article in PDF |
Bertolini, John A. (John Anthony), 1947 Wilde and Shakespeare in Shaw's You Never Can Tell [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
King, Annie Papreck. Shakespeare's Shavian Cleopatra Access article in PDF |
Ryan, Vanessa Lyndal. ‘Considering the Alternatives ...’: Shaw and the Death of the Intellectual [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Switzky, Lawrence. The Last Word on Last Words: Shaw and Catastrophic Drama Access article in PDF |
Saslav, Isidor. Shaw's Letters in Other People's Books: The ‘Orphans’ [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
|
Reviews |
||||||||||
|
Dukore, Bernard Frank,
1931- G.B.S. Boxed Access
article in PDF |
Gahan, Peter, 1955- Shaw at 150: The BBC on DVD [Access
article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Weintraub, Stanley, 1929- More Shaw on the Great War Access article in PDF |
Wise, Ivan. The Voice of Shaw [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Sparks, Julie A. Dick Dudgeon, Caesar, and Captain Brassbound
in |
Pfeiffer, John R. A Continuing Checklist of Shaviana [Access article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
Contributors
Access
article in PDF |
Notices [Access
article in PDF] |
|||||||||
|
International
Shaw Society News Access
article in PDF |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
d. Obituary (1) |
||||||||||
|
. |
||||||||||
|
Dan H. Laurence died aged 87 on |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
From John
Bertolini |
||||||||||
|
The first gift my wife gave me when she and I were
19 was Dan’s edition of the Collected Letters, Dan’s gift to the
world. My next Dan encounter was seeing him on TV when he introduced –
with a charm and energy matching Shaw’s own – Mrs. Warren’s Profession on NY
ETV, another gift to the public on behalf of Shaw. |
||||||||||
|
When I finally met him in person at the |
||||||||||
|
To state the obvious, Dan was a great stimulus to
Shaw scholarship, only not succeeding when he came
up against figures (like me) who could not match his work ethic and boundless
force of will. Here’s what happened. I happened to mention to dear Fred the
much-missed Crawford that it would be great to see all the 1950s TV
productions of Shaw. This was an idle thought of an idle hour. One week later
I start to receive the first in a steady stream of press clippings, info
about ALL Shaw productions on TV, in preparation, you see, for ‘this article
of yours, John, on the TV Shaw’!!! Well, I never did write that article.
Alas, I failed Dan but never received a single word of reproach. Over the
years I had many a free wheeling hour-long phone conversation with Dan, and
somehow he made one feel life was not futile. No one could fail to be a better
person, in whatever measure – for knowing him. |
||||||||||
|
Goodnight, Dan, pleasant dreams, old warrior. We
can never repay your many gifts to us all, but then it is the King who only
gives gifts but does not receive them. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
From MaryAnn Crawford |
||||||||||
|
I
have been sad – thinking about Dan all day, this day of his death. He
was a very special person to me as he was to so many. I remember
meeting him – at the same first time that Fred did – in |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
From Norma
Jenckes |
||||||||||
|
The loss
of Dan Laurence to all Shavians is inestimable. His work on the letters and
the bibliography are the foundation stones of all Shaw scholarship. Not a day
goes by that I do not turn to him for help and enlightenment, and always I am
drawn into his nuanced and informative prose to a greater understanding of
whatever aspect of Shaw’s life and letters and connections that I am seeking. |
||||||||||
|
Dan’s
published work will remain a reliable resource, but what has been taken from
us with his death now is something infinitely dearer: Dan’s personal help and
suggestions and encouragement in any and every project related to Shaw. |
||||||||||
|
Generosity
is a rare virtue among all populations, but sometimes it seems to me that the
competitive and narrow nature of some scholarship makes it even rarer in the
halls of academe. But Dan was a model of generosity. He so much wanted to
make everything he touched clearer and better. I believe that he shared that
trait with his own role model, Shaw himself. |
||||||||||
|
Over the
years I have sought Dan’s help with problems large and small, and he never
failed to give a full, thorough and extremely useful response. |
||||||||||
|
Unsung
and unrecorded, Dan loaned his ear, his research materials and also gave his
money. I don’t know if he had known financial hardship as a child or young
person, but he never assumed that everyone had the privileges that he had
acquired. He had a great gift for empathy and he was aware that not everyone
had the financial resources to fulfill his promise. I am not really familiar
with any of the details of Dan’s personal life; what I do know and can attest
to is the extraordinary energy and passion he expended to advance Shaw
studies and to aid all of us who are also toiling in the same field. |
||||||||||
|
Dan could
be gruff and scary, but his warmth and affection were unmistakable, and the
reality of his firm hand clasp and the strong embrace that were his unfailing
greeting will remain with me always. |
||||||||||
|
As I
think about Dan this sad wintry morning in |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
From Isidor Saslav |
||||||||||
|
Such sad
news. I am on my way to |
||||||||||
|
I'll
never forget when he and I first met some 35 years ago at the Shaw Festival
where he was a resident lecturer at the time. He was kind enough to
look through the cards of my collection and give me advice on this and that
item and as to how to improve the collection. And of course, being the
generous friend to all that he was, he continued our correspondence along
that line through all the years since. He occasionally chastised me for
being too much of an omni-collector, which I am the first to admit that I
am. I visited |
||||||||||
|
I'm so
glad too that you got him to come to |
||||||||||
|
There
will never be another one like him. | ||||||||||