Literally annoying

George Bernard Shaw is guilty of hit­ting one of my pet peeves in “an ini­tialled review” he wrote of Ibsen’s A Doll’s House in 1897. Yeah, I’m still not over it.1

His review is, in all other respects, per­fectly fine. I’d argue over the seman­tic appro­pri­ate­ness of describ­ing it as a “review”, for it seems more a belated crit­i­cism, focussing more on society’s response to the play than on the play itself, but I digress. Write about the annoy­ing bit already! Okay, okay.

The woman’s eyes are opened; and instantly her doll’s dress is thrown off and her hus­band left star­ing at her, help­less, bound thence­forth either to do with­out her (an alter­na­tive which makes short work of his fan­cied inde­pen­dence) or else treat her as a human being like him­self, fully rec­og­niz­ing that he is not a crea­ture of one supe­rior species, Man, liv­ing with a crea­ture of another and infe­rior species, Woman, but that Mankind is male and female, like other kinds, and that the inequal­ity of the sexes is lit­er­ally a cock and bull story, cer­tain to end in such unbear­able humil­i­a­tion as that which our sub­ur­ban King Arthurs suf­fer at the hands of Ibsen.

No, my com­plaint is not with multiple-run-on sen­tences (for I myself am often guilty of that, though per­haps less spec­tac­u­larly than his rather-admirable effor there), but rather with his abuse of the term “lit­er­ally”. No, GBS, A Doll’s House’s rejec­tion of the notion of the inequal­ity of the sexes is not achieved through lit­er­ally pre­sent­ing this as a story about a cock and a bull. You may use that as a metaphor, but not lit­er­ally. Declar­ing some­thing to be lit­eral does not serve to empha­sise the point. In fact, in this instance, it serves only to ridicule it.

*pulls faces*

The end.

1 I’m the first to admit I was born in the wrong cen­tury. Love of the Inter­net and tech­nol­ogy in gen­eral aside, I could quite hap­pily have spent my days as a fringe-Romantic intel­lec­tual argu­ing with var­i­ous fig­ures of sim­i­lar stand­ing in the late nine­teenth cen­tury. So call me an élitist, or some­thing. I enabled dead keys on my key­board just so I could type élitist prop­erly, you know? I’m that bad. It makes typ­ing apos­tro­phes hellish…

# by Josh on October 9th, 2005 Tags: , ,
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No, really, I’m here

Again. Promise I’m not about to scurry away. Damn it, believe me!

Any­way, to make up for the dis­tinct lack of con­tent this place has been suf­fer­ing from (although the hits don’t suf­fer, thanks to search engines and pre­vi­ous rel­e­vant con­tent regard­ing MP3 play­ers, the set of A Doll’s House, and mis­cel­la­neous other things…), here’s a list of what I’ve been read­ing over the last week or two. If you can’t read the titles on the cover images, hold your mouse over and text will appear. Click­ing images takes you to the rel­e­vant Amazon.com prod­uct page (great for reviews that I’m too lazy to type now…). I’ve got more to say on some of these books, but can’t be both­ered typ­ing right about now.

Les Misérables (Hugo) The Dosadi Experiment (Herbert) Future Active: Media Activism and the Internet (Meikle) Angels and Demons (Brown)
Digital Fortress (Brown) Hamlet (Shakespeare) Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (Stoppard) Street Boys (Carcaterra)

# by Josh on January 5th, 2005 Tags: , ,
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Essay: Act 1, A Doll’s House

An essay. 1992 words. My stan­dard Cre­ative Com­mons license applies — this means attri­bu­tion is required, and you aren’t legally per­mit­ted to repub­lish this as your own work (yes, even for non-commercial rea­sons such as school). Read the rest of this entry »

Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” set design

It’s been said pre­vi­ously that Ibsen’s set direc­tives at the begin­ning of A Doll’s House sim­ply don’t work. Just to prove them wrong (or pos­si­bly right!), I decided to block up a set from his direc­tives Read the rest of this entry »

# by Josh on October 29th, 2004 Tags: , ,
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Another missing day

I would have posted yes­ter­day, but for the fact that I’d been screw­ing with DNS stuff (fool­ishly on my www record) yes­ter­day, and it was most unfor­giv­ing come time to change it back. Whilst I’d nor­mally see changes fairly quickly, this time around my ISP’s DNS servers (and pre­sum­ably what­ever ISP I’m using as my sec­ondary) were excru­ci­at­ingly slow to update. So, I haven’t been able to login to my admin panel, hence the lack of posting!

Hmm. Aside from that, of course, other things have been hap­pen­ing. Yes­ter­day was my brother’s 8th birth­day — I would say happy birth­day, but he doesn’t read this, so there we go. :P We went out to Juanita’s, a great Mex­i­can restaru­ant in Kens­ing­ton, and… umm… ate food. As you do.

The rest yes­ter­day was spent on a vari­ety of things, from fran­ti­cally edit­ing CSS and the occa­sional graphic (all visual design work, thank­fully — I’ve decided that I shouldn’t make a habit of pro­gram­ming, as it’s some­thing I reg­u­larly fall flat on my face try­ing!) for an upcom­ing web­site, to read­ing Hen­rik Ibsen’s 1877 play, A Doll’s House. Read the rest of this entry »

# by Josh on October 11th, 2004 Tags: , , , , , , ,
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