.
George Bernard Shaw
was born in Dublin on 26th July, 1856. His father,George
Carr Shaw,
a corn miller, was also an alcoholic and therefore their was very little
money to spend on George's education. George went to local schools but
never went to university and was largely self-taught.
After working in an estate office in Dublin, Shaw moved to London in
March, 1876. Shaw hoped to become a writer and during the next seven
years wrote five unsuccessful novels. He was more successful with his
journalism and contributed to Pall Mall Gazette. Shaw got on
well with the newspaper's campaigning editor, William Stead, who
attempted to use the power of the popular press to obtain social reform.
In 1882 Shaw heard Henry George lecture on land nationalization. This
had a profound effect on Shaw and helped to develop his ideas on
socialism. Shaw now joined the Social Democratic Federation and its
leader, H. H. Hyndman, introduced him to the works of Karl Marx. Shaw
was convinced by the economic theories in Das
Kapital but was aware that it would have little impact on the
working class. He later wrote that although the book had been written
for the working man, "Marx never got hold of him for a moment. It
was the revolting sons of the bourgeois itself - Lassalle, Marx,
Liebknecht, Morris, Hyndman, Bax, all like myself, crossed with
squirearchy - that painted the flag red. The middle and upper classes
are the revolutionary element in society; the proletariat is the
conservative element."
Shaw became an active member of the Social Democratic Federation (SDF),
and became friends with others in the movement including William Morris,
Annie Besant,Walter Crane, Edward Aveling and Belfort Bax. In May 1884
Shaw joined the Fabian Society and the following year, the Socialist
League, an organisation that had been formed by Morris and Marx after a
dispute with H. H. Hyndman, the leader of the SDF.
George Bernard Shaw gave lectures on socialism on street corners
and helped distribute political literature. On 13th November he took
part in a demonstration in London that resulted in the Bloody Sunday
Riot. However, he always felt uncomfortable with trade union members and
preferred debate to action.
By 1886, Shaw tended to concentrate his efforts on the work that he did
with the Fabian Society. The society that included Edward
Carpenter, Annie Besant, Walter Crane, Sidney Webb and Beatrice
Webb believed that capitalism had created an unjust and inefficient
society. They agreed that the ultimate aim of the group should be to
reconstruct "society in accordance with the highest moral
possibilities".
The Fabian Society rejected the revolutionary socialism of the Social
Democratic Federation and were concerned with helping society to move to
a socialist society "as painless and effective as possible".
This is reflected in the fact that the group was named after the Roman
General, Quintus Fabius Maximus, who advocated the weakening the
opposition by harassing operations rather than becoming involved in
pitched battles.
The Fabian group was a "fact-finding and fact-dispensing body"
and they produced a series of pamphlets on a wide variety of different
social issues. Many of these were written by Shaw including
The Fabian Manifesto (1884),
The True Radical Programme (1887),
Fabian Election Manifesto (1892), The
Impossibilities of Anarchism (1893), Fabianism
and the Empire (1900) and Socialism
for Millionaires (1901).
In his pamphlets George Bernard Shaw
argued in favour of equality of income and advocated the equitable
division of land and capital. Shaw believed that "property was
theft" and believed like Karl Marx that capitalism was deeply
flawed and was unlikely to last. However, unlike Marx, Shaw favoured
gradualism over revolution. In a pamphlet, that he wrote in 1897 Shaw
predicted that socialism "will come by prosaic installments of
public regulation and public administration enacted by ordinary
parliaments, vestries, municipalities, parish councils, school boards,
etc."
Shaw worked closely with Sidney Webb in trying to establish a new
political party that was committed to obtaining socialism through
parliamentary elections. This view was expressed in their Fabian Society
pamphlet A Plan on Campaign for Labour.
In 1893 Shaw was one of the Fabian Society delegates that attended the
conference in Bradford that led to the formation of the Independent
Labour Party. Three years later Shaw produced a report for the Trade
Union Congress (TUC) that suggested a political party that had strong
links with the trade union movement. In 1899 Shaw served on the TUC
committee that looked into the best way to mobilize the political power
of the labour movement.
On 27th February 1900 the Fabian Society joined with the
Independent Labour Party, the Social
Democratic Federation and trade union leaders to form the
Labour Representation Committee (LRC). The
LRC put up fifteen candidates in the 1900 General Election and between
them they won 62,698 votes. Two of the candidates, Keir Hardie and
Richard Bell won seats in the
House of Commons. The party did even better in
the 1906 election with twenty nine successful candidates. Later that
year the LRC decided to change its name to the Labour
Party.
George Bernard Shaw wrote several
plays with political themes during this period. This included
Man and Superman (1902),
John Bull's Other Island (1904) and
Major Barbara (1905). These plays
dealt with issues such as poverty and women's rights and implied that
socialism could help solve the problems created by capitalism.
Like many socialists,George
Bernard Shaw opposed Britain's involvement in the First World
War. He created a great deal of controversy with his provocative
pamphlet, Common Sense About the War
(1914).
Shaw's status as a playwright continued to grow after the war and plays
such as Heartbreak House (1919), Back
to Methuselah (1921), Saint Joan
(1923), The Apple Cart (1929) and
Too True to be Good (1932) were
favourably received by the critics and 1925 he was awarded the Nobel
prize for literature.
Shaw continued to write books and pamphlets on political and social
issues. This included The Crime of Imprisonment
(1922), Intelligent Woman's Guide to
Socialism (1928) and Everybody's
Political What's What (1944). George
Bernard Shaw remained committed to the socialist cause until
his death on 2nd November, 1950.
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