¶ … Shaw's primary purposes in writing Pygmalion, the story of a phonetics professor who, on a bet, transforms a guttersnipe of a flower girl into a lady, was to educate. The title of the play comes from the Greek myth of Pygmalion, a sculptor who created a statue of surpassing beauty; at his request, the gods animated the statue as Galatea. The myth is updated, and substantially altered, by Shaw; instead of a statue, Galatea is Eliza Doolittle, a Covent Garden flower girl, whose accent immediately marks her out as from the very bottom of the English class structure. Professor Henry Higgins, an expert on accents and pronunciation, represents Pygmalion. He undertakes to transform her speech so that she can be taken for a duchess at a society party and succeeds in spite of the inherent difficulties.
In his foreword to the play, Shaw writes, "It is so intensely and deliberately didactic, and its subject is esteemed so dry, that I delight in throwing it at the heads of the wiseacres who repeat the parrot cry that art should never be didactic. It goes to prove my contention that great art can never be anything else."
Enslavement shapes many of the relationships in Jean Rhys's novel "Wide Sargasso Sea" -- not just those between blacks and whites. The mood is one of change, decline, and danger, heightened by isolation. The setting is the island of Jamaica, the community is white and English - but the family of Antoinette, the heroine, is excluded from white ranks because of her stepmother's Martiniquan origin. The death of the father has cast the children adrift: here, the father is associated with the past - identified in the novel with the time of slavery. Christophine is an ex-slave, also Martiniquan, a friend to Antoinette's mother and then to Antoinette herself: she becomes a powerful black voice in the novel, as she is never afraid to speak her mind. Annette keeps repeating the word "marooned" over and over again, as she feels helplessly imprisoned at Coulibri Estate after the death of her husband, Likewise, Antoinette is so in-love and dependent on her husband that she is doomed to this strange form of enslavement. Women's childlike dependence on fathers and husbands represents a figurative slavery that is made literal in Antoinette's ultimate physical captivity.
Starting with Homer's Odyssey and Helen of Troy, great beauty became an increasing burden on the self-confidence of women, up to our times. In the romance novel, the model heroine has long represented this ideal of the perfect beauty. But the realistic heroine is much more present lately, and captures readers' attention just as much as her perfect predecessor did.
Jane Austen's heroines and Bronte's Jane Eyre, or Jean Rhys's Antoinette are prototypes of this character, but the usual heroines in most romance novels reference the common woman. This heroine accepts the general opinion around her that her looks, or her manners, or her thinking aren't special. However, while she may want a better life, she doesn't focus on perfection the way her society does. A realistic heroin is unsophisticated, modest, honest, tranquil, of good intellect and independent by choice. Any suffering she experiences stems from the limits society places on her because of her looks.
As George Bernard Shaw said of Eliza Doolittle, "You use a glass mirror to see the face; you use works of art to see the soul." Shaw's "Pygmalion," later adapted into "My Fair Lady," was about the heroine's need for a better job and the better way of life that went with it. Eliza doesn't want nor think about transforming into a duchess. Professor Higgins doesn't fall in love, although the producers of "My Fair Lady" seemed to have forgotten about that; Shaw resisted that change in his hero even when his audience wanted it. To him, the story was about the cost of upper class meddling to improve the lives of the lower class. Although her appearance may be different, this isn't the way Eliza wins Prof. Higgins....
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