Wednesday, June 3, 2020
ââ¬ÅConverting Starving Men with a Bible is Cheap Workââ¬Â Shawââ¬â¢s Perspectives on Money, Salvation, and Poverty in Major Barbara - Literature Essay Samples
In Major Barbara (1907), George Bernard Shaw questions the prevailing ethical assumptions and attitudes of Western culture on social engineering and poverty. Like Nietzsche, he calls for the revaluation of values, as the meaning of concepts like ââ¬Å"good,â⬠ââ¬Å"evil,â⬠and ââ¬Å"truth,â⬠with no eternal, rigid, absolute, objective meaning, depends on an ever-shifting context of the will to power and the practical world. Written with a sense of perspectivism, it challenges the audience to struggle with its own prejudices, forcing inward reflection. For Shaw, Christian values no longer fit the context, the world situation ââ¬â ââ¬Å"God is dead; but given the way people are, there may still for a millennia be caves in which they show his shadowâ⬠(Nietzsche 108), god died and Christianity survived its death. The Salvation Army center that Barbara works at is the cave where the shadow persists; ââ¬Å"I see no darkness here [Perivale St. Andrews], no dreadfulness. In your Salvation center, I saw poverty, misery, cold, and hunger. You gave them bread and treacle dreams of heavenâ⬠(Shaw 155). A god has ââ¬Å"fled, â⬠its light burnt out, closing a past world of understanding, serving no useful purpose for reality (its ways nothing but mere illusions); Cusins, after accepting Undershaftââ¬â¢s offer, puts it appropriately, ââ¬Å"the world can never be really touched by a dead language and a dead civilizationâ⬠(Shaw 158). The values of the past have failed, ââ¬Å"Poverty and slavery have stood for centuries to your sermons and leading articlesâ⬠(156), why continue to pursue them? Sir Andrew Undershaft, the great arms industrialist of Europe, gives Barbara this advice on value systems, ââ¬Å"you have made for yourself a something that you call a morality or a religion or what not. It doesnââ¬â¢t fit the facts. Well, scrap it. Scrap it and get one that does fit. That is what is wrong with the world at presentâ⬠(155). Our created social structures and systems are no different than the technology we create; however, we have the need to hold onto old belief systems, giving the delusion of permanence, only scrapping technology ââ¬â ââ¬Å"It [the West] scraps its obsolete steam engines and dynamos; but it wonââ¬â¢t scrap its old prejudices and its old moralities and its old religions and its old political constitutionsâ⬠(155). What is the result? Undershaft observes, ââ¬Å"In machinery it does very well; but in morals and religion and politics it is working at a lossâ⬠(155). His philosophy here closely resembles the Marxist, dialectical materialist, opposition between the infrastructure, the economic sphere of productivity, and the superstructure, the social sphere of ideology, including morality, religion, politics, and all ââ¬Å"traditionalâ⬠attitudes. The superstructure evolves more slowly and is more resistant to change than the eco nomic infrastructure, especially in the modern industrial age. Undershaft believes, for society to function smoothly, for real solutions concerning social problems, the superstructure must progress like the economic infrastructure, ââ¬Å"If your religion broke down yesterday, get a newer and a better one for tomorrowâ⬠(155). What is the proposed ââ¬Å"solution,â⬠the new understanding and logic?If Shaw did write in Nietzchean perspectivism, then, like a sculpture, the phenomenon of poverty, and its possible solutions, must be looked at in various perspectives. Through Undershaft, Shaw offers a ââ¬Å"solutionâ⬠opposite of what is standard, familiar, and taken for granted, in a type of deconstructive act. For Undershaft, salvation and progress stems from money and power:You talk of your half-saved ruffian in West Ham [at the Salvation Army center]: you accuse me of dragging his soul back to perdition. Well, bring him to me here [Perivale St. Andrews]; and I will drag his soul back again to salvation for you. Not by words and dreams; but by thirty-eight schillings a week, a sound house in a handsome street, and permanent job (156).He points out the charade and hypocrisy of Barbaraââ¬â¢s method of salvation, ââ¬Å"It is cheap work converting starving men with a Bible in one hand and a slice of bread in anotherâ⬠(156). Undershaft ââ¬Å"buysâ⬠the Salvation Army; the very source of evil the Army condemns. Shaw leaves us with question,â⬠if everything operates under money and power, why then can it not be a solution to the social problems that have continued to plague our society for so very long?â⬠Works CitedNietzsche, Friedrich. The Gay Science (Philosophical Classics). Minneapolis: Dover Publications, 2006.Shaw, George Bernard. ââ¬Å"Major Barbara.â⬠Modern and Contemporary Drama. Ed. Miriam Gilbert, Carl H. Klaus, Bradford S. Field, Jr. New York: Bedford/St. Martinââ¬â¢s, 1994. 121-160.
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