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Plays Political
Plays Political
Nov 25, 2025 4:22 AM

Author:Dan Laurence,George Bernard Shaw

Plays Political

While some of Shaw’s earlier plays are still performed, his later plays, such as the ones in this volume, are barely known. As the collective title indicates, the themes here are political; yet, frankly, it is doubtful how seriously we can now take Shaw as a political thinker. Despite writing in the 1930s, he has little to say of the nature of totalitarianism: although he satirises Fascist dictators in “Geneva”, the satire is disappointingly mild. Neither did Shaw appear to foresee (on the evidence of these plays, at least) the imminent collapse of the British Empire.But it is Shaw the dramatist rather than Shaw the political philosopher who still holds our attention – even in plays as explicitly political as these. He had a sharp intellect and a quirky sense of humour, and his dialogue still glints and sparkles: he couldn’t write a dull line if he tried. No matter how serious the themes he addresses, the crispness of his writing and his lightness of touch still scintillate.Shaw seems, perhaps unfairly, out of fashion nowadays. But even in these lesser-known works, he demonstrates his matchless ability, still undimmed, to provoke and to entertain.

Reviews

It is this characteristic opposition which makes The Great World a truthful portrait of Australia. Sufferings and wrongs abound, but there is no dullness.

—— Independent

An example of how fiction may still be individual, honest and humanly truthful. Malouf's great talent is precisely for unmasking the epic or world-historical - for finding the human backing to history's all reflecting mirror

—— The Times

Lucid and accessible. His most ambitious book so far

—— Guardian

A truthful portait of Australia

—— Independent on Sunday

A book of great stature with moral force and moral truth

—— Times Literary Supplement

'A superb fictional debut, impossible to read without grinning or grimacing'

—— Mark Sanderson , Time Out

'Superb short stories...Coen's pitch-perfect ear for American demotic is on proud display. His fascination with people who talk but never listen - and the lingustic impasse that results when they get together - is almost Beckettian'

—— Tom Shone , Evening Standard
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