Ageing, Utopia, and George Bernard Shaw | 15th Jun
Dr Siân Adiseshiah will be presenting a paper titled, ‘Ageing, Utopia, and George Bernard Shaw’ on Thursday 15th June in the Cargill Lecture Theatre.
Doors open 4.00pm for a 4.15pm start. Wine and nibbles available.
Abstract Below:
George Bernard Shaw’s five-part play, Back to Methuselah (1921), presents an epic expanse of time: from the beginnings of Creation with Adam and Eve in Part One to the year 31,920 – ‘As far as Thought Can Reach’ – in Part Five. The utopian worlds of Parts Four and Five come about through extended life, which is considered key to creating the long-term vision deemed central to establishing the good life. In this paper, I examine the relationship between ageing and utopianism in Back to Methuselah. The play – in common with most utopian drama – has been neglected by Utopian Studies scholarship, and part of my attention is on what I consider to be the play’s disruption of dominant definitional ways in which mainstream Utopian Studies scholarship establishes the literary utopia. This paper sketches out preliminary responses to two main questions: What is the significance of Shaw’s alignment of utopian possibility with longevity? And why has Back to Methuselah been neglected by Utopian Studies scholarship?
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