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Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries BERNARD SHAW’S FICTION, MATERIAL PSYCHOLOGY, & AFFECT Shaw, Freud, Simmel Stephen Watt Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries Series Editors Nelson O’Ceallaigh Ritschel Massachusetts Maritime Academy Pocasset, MA, USA Peter Gahan Independent Scholar Los Angeles, CA, USA The series Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries presents the best and most up-to-date research on Shaw and his contemporaries in a diverse range of cultural contexts. Volumes in the series will further the academic understanding of Bernard Shaw and those who worked with him, or in reaction against him, during his long career from the 1880s to 1950 as a leading writer in Britain and Ireland, and with a wide European and American following. Shaw defined the modern literary theatre in the wake of Ibsen as a vehicle for social change, while authoring a dramatic canon to rival Shakespeare’s. His careers as critic, essayist, playwright, journalist, lecturer, socialist, fem- inist, and pamphleteer, both helped to shape the modern world as well as pointed the way towards modernism. No one engaged with his contem- poraries more than Shaw, whether as controversialist, or in his support of other, often younger writers. In many respects, therefore, the series as it develops will offer a survey of the rise of the modern at the beginning of the twentieth century and the subsequent varied cultural movements cov- ered by the term modernism that arose in the wake of World War 1. More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14785 Stephen Watt Bernard Shaw’s Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect Shaw, Freud, Simmel Stephen Watt Indiana University Bloomington, IN, USA Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries ISBN 978-3-319-71512-4 ISBN 978-3-319-71513-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71513-1 Library of Congress Control Number: 2018932696 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2018 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the pub- lisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institu- tional affiliations. Cover illustration: Congregation, 2003–2008 (c) Ledelle Moe North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh Purchased with funds from the North Carolina Museum of Art Docents, 2010.2/1 277 Printed on acid-free paper This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland Ledelle Moe Congregation, 2003–2008 Concrete, recycled motor oil, and steel bar 277 separate elements; dimensions variable North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, Purchased with funds from the North Carolina Museum of Art Docents, 2010.2/1 277 v A cknowledgements The genealogy of this book, like most with which I am familiar, is para- doxically straightforward and somewhat gnarled by complexities that require just a little unraveling. A summary of these latter issues might wait for another occasion, however, as the straightforward part is simply described and bears directly on the pages that follow. After agreeing some time ago to edit a special issue of SHAW: The Journal of Bernard Shaw Studies on the topic of “Shaw and Money,” Nelson Ritschel and Audrey MacNamara approached me about contributing an article that addressed this topic through a reading of the five novels that Shaw wrote between 1879 and 1883. I was flattered to have been asked and pleased to comply with their request, the result appearing in the journal in 2016, and I am grateful that they afforded me this opportunity. For throughout the pro- cess of preparing the article—“Unashamed: Value, Affect, and Shaw’s Psychology of Money,” SHAW: The Journal of Bernard Shaw Studies 36.1 (2016): 53–72, which forms the basis of Chap. 3 of this book—I began to suspect that a good deal more might be said about both Shaw’s fiction and his evolving understanding of such matters as money, the subjective qual- ity of putatively objective notions such as value, the social performance of wealth and class, and more. However, while I was sure that these issues vitally inform, at times even dominate, both Shaw’s writing and his own interior life—and, for this reason, the pages that follow include not only sustained readings of his novels, but also discussions of many of his plays, essays, and letters—I really wasn’t certain that I was capable of a book that concentrated largely on the five novels he produced as a struggling young immigrant living in London. vii viii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS After the article appeared, Ritschel and Peter Gahan, general editors of this series of texts on “Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries” and both excellent scholars in their own right, wondered about much the same thing and posed a question: Did a book-length project lurk somewhere in my muddle of thoughts about Shaw’s fiction and the psychical and affec- tive implications of money, among other material entities, on both him and his characters? Uncertain of how to respond, I spent the better part of a year reading and outlining before hazarding a tepid “yes.” Then, of course, more work and study followed, during which time another more precise challenge emerged: namely, how might this study contribute to the larger aims of Nelson and Peter’s series? Given the fact that the pages that follow combine a morsel of economic theory of Shaw’s era with more generous portions of both sociological and nascent psychoanalytic thought at the fin de siècle of the nineteenth century and after, several answers pre- sented themselves. As the nonagenarian Shaw admitted in his autobio- graphical volume Sixteen Self Sketches (1949), for example, his understand- ing of the theories of Karl Marx in the early 1880s was subsequently revised by his conversations—and published dialogue—with Philip Wicksteed (1844–1927), who was himself greatly influenced by the mar- ginal economist William Stanley Jevons (1835–82), a fact of which Shaw was very much aware. Both economists appear in the pages that follow, but not in the leading roles that they might. When discussing affect and performance, to take another example, prominent actors of the fin de siècle stage such as the Italian star Eleonora Duse (1858–1924), whose talent confirmed for Shaw that a “dramatic critic is really the servant of a high art,” also appear in these pages, although again not necessarily in the spot- light their distinguished careers and international influence merit. In some ways, it seems an almost impossible task to discuss so multifoliate an intel- lectual as Shaw without reference to a host of composers, philosophers, actors and playwrights, politicians, economists, and more. In other words, the contemporaries who might have been featured in the limelight of this book are many, and the majority of them, regrettably, will not be. However, some other contemporaries of Bernard Shaw will figure prominently in the pages that follow, ones he hardly knew or, in actuality, knew relatively little about even if on occasion he might have suggested otherwise. That is to say, while Shaw and Wicksteed may have skirmished collegially in the mid-1880s over Marx’s Value Theory—a disagreement waged, as biographer Michael Holroyd terms it, in the “friendliest spirit”— they also participated convivially for some years in discussions of e conomics ACKNOWLEDGEMENT S ix with several friends and acquaintances that Holroyd valorizes as the “clos- est thing” Shaw got to a university education. Shaw did not cultivate such a close relationship, however, with two European counterparts, Sigmund Freud and Georg Simmel, the former of whom Shaw was certainly aware and about whom he expressed a variety of opinions, many of them queru- lous or even combative, and the latter of whom Shaw apparently did not know well, if at all. Yet, these three are, quite literally, contemporaries: Freud was born less than three months before Shaw in May, 1856; and Simmel, less than two years later on March 1, 1858. And, as I have indi- cated, unlike, say, the close relationships Shaw enjoyed with William Archer, or with Beatrice and Sidney Webb—relationships that directly influenced his writing and thought—this trio of relative strangers had no such interactions but nevertheless shared remarkable intellectual affinities. Here I mean to reference more than Freud’s admiration of Ibsen—in his “Autobiographical Study,” he revealed his affinity with Dr. Stockmann in An Enemy of the People and his disdain for the “compact majority” that opposed him—or his quotation from the Preface of Shaw’s Doctor’s Dilemma while mourning the death of a beloved grandson in 1923. All three thinkers, for example, were compelled to engage the science of Charles Darwin, although Simmel did less of this than Freud or Shaw; all three puzzled over such issues as value and the relationships between money, capital, and people; and all three were concerned with life in the increasingly frenetic modern city and its effect on human sensibilities, as the following pages will attempt to delineate. Such a claim may strike some as beyond counterintuitive. After all, when Shaw was not dismissive of or ambivalent about psychoanalytic thought, he was accusing Freud of lacking both “delicacy and common- sense.” For over a half of a century, from the work of Brigid Brophy, Arthur Nethercot, and Sidney P. Alpert in the 1960s and 1970s, scholars have debated Shaw’s knowledge of and stance toward the emergent dis- course of psychoanalysis. For Brophy in Black Ship to Hell (1962), Freud and Shaw are “the two great mainstays” of twentieth-century thought who laid foundations for a “twentieth-century morality,” and her Shaw “rarely contradicts the findings of psycho-analysis, though he is at pains to ignore them.” For Albert in a seminal essay “Reflections on Shaw and Psychoanalysis” (1971), while Shaw frequently displays a “measure of familiarity with Freudian method,” this is typically accompanied by “skep- ticism toward it.” Somewhat contradictorily, he also asserts that Shaw’s “approach” to the “new theory” was “decidedly open-minded and x ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS judicious.” More recently, as Peter Gahan describes it in Shaw Shadows: Rereading the Texts of Bernard Shaw (2004), Shaw and Freud were “both rather cagey about each other’s work and not because they were unac- quainted with it.” Yet, as I think both Albert and Gahan imply, Shaw’s views of psychoanalysis were far more complicated than simple censure— or denial. The case is less complicated with Simmel who, in his magnum opus The Philosophy of Money (1900), which grew out of lectures he deliv- ered in Vienna (and elsewhere) in the 1890s, makes no reference to Freud at all. Freud, however, as his distinguished biographer Peter Gay observes, certainly knew of Simmel, as Karen Horney invoked his work in criticizing the male bias inherent to much psychoanalytic thought. But neither Freud nor Shaw engaged Simmel’s multidisciplinary and influential writing about money or assessed Simmel’s enormous impact on modern sociology. Happily, however, excavating relationships between these intellectual “mainstays” or “bearded masters,” to borrow Brophy’s terms, is not the aim of this book. Instead, the prompt to think about a project on Shaw’s fiction as part of a series entitled “Shaw and His Contemporaries” led me, for reasons that I hope will become clear, to affinities between these three distinguished figures who, although working in different fields, nonethe- less contributed to a discourse concerned with how modern human sub- jectivity—particularly as manifested in feeling and emotion—was being shaped by the velocity and increasing financialization of modern life. In some respects, this book advances an approach similar to that which Elizabeth S. Goodstein develops in those parts of Georg Simmel and the Disciplinary Imaginary (2017) that identify parallels between Freudian psychoanalysis and Simmelian sociology: between foreignness in Simmel’s “Excurs über den Fremden” (“Excursus on the Stranger,” 1908) and Freud’s “The Uncanny” (1919), for example, or between the nervous exhaustion of life in the modern metropolis and Freudian assessments of the ego’s functioning as a defense against the external world. However, unlike Goodstein’s fine book and the work of these other extraordinary scholars, my goals here revolve, finally, around Bernard Shaw’s novels and their representations of a particularly material—and at times materialist— psychology and its relation to both feeling and emotion. Throughout this book, then, and particularly in its second chapter, I attempt to delineate the ways in which Freud’s and Simmel’s theories of such matters as value and affect might aid in a reading of Shaw’s fiction (and, occasionally, of Shaw himself).

Description:
This book traces the effects of materiality - including money and its opposite, poverty - on the psychical lives of George Bernard Shaw and his characters. While this study focuses on the protagonists of the five novels Shaw wrote in the late 1870s and early 1880s, it also explores how materialism,
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