This volumes comprises the personal correspondence of Shaw and Wells through the course of their friendship of more than forty years, and includes and introductory essay by J. Percy Smith.
The second volume in the series of Shaw's correspondence contains 152 letters between him and fellow Victorian British writer and Fabian Club member Wells, exchanged between 1901 and 1946.
A paradoxical portrayal of an international literary phenomenon, whose audience included both Roosevelt and Stalin, shows that H. G. Wells was a misogynist champion for women's rights and a liberally tolerant anti-Semite.
arbitrarily , in Matthew Arnold's Culture and Anarchy . For one thing , his binary opposition between ' culture ' and ' anarchy ' was frequently evoked to distinguish between those acculturated Jews that could be accommodated within a ...
Brief biographies on the lives, thought and work of some of the centuries greatest writers and thinkers. Including George Bernard Shaw, H.G. Wells, John Dewey, G. K. Chesterton , F. C. S. Schiller, Rudolf Eucken.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the "public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.
Drama1, 2, 3, 4 Dunbar Erv Farmer Guelph Harvard Hend1 Hend2 Hend3 Hol1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Hyde I&R Imm Joad L&G Lbib1, 2 Lgen McNulty Morgan Bernard Shaw, The Drama Observed, 4 vols, ed. Bernard F. Dukore (University Park: Pennsylvania State ...
A hilarious send-up of sex, scandal, and the Golden Age of Hollywood by legendary cartoonist Edward Sorel.
He Predicted Our Current Moral Decline - A Hundred Years Ago Chesterton's compilation of essays in Heretics discusses the difference in Orthodoxy and Heretics, rational vs. irrational, and denial vs. affirmation.
Excerpt from Guy Domville: Play in Three Acts, With Comments by Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells and Arnold Bennett IN this book is published - for the first time in a popular edition - Henry James's play Guy Dom ville, which all but created a ...
All the correspondence selected for this volume - most of it hitherto unpublished - relates to Bernard Shaw's theatre dealings and theatrical interest, at the same time attesting to the 'histrionic instinct' and 'theatrified imagination' ...