Saint Joan: A Chronicle Play in Six Scenes and an Epilogue (Audio)
Joan of Arc, a village girl from the Vosges, was born about 1412—burnt for heresy, witchcraft, and sorcery in 1431—rehabilitated after a fashion in 1456—designated Venerable in 1904—declared Blessed in 1908—and finally canonized in 1920. She is the most notable Warrior-Saint in the Christian...
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Joan of Arc, a village girl from the Vosges, was born about 1412—burnt for heresy, witchcraft, and sorcery in 1431—rehabilitated after a fashion in 1456—designated Venerable in 1904—declared Blessed in 1908—and finally canonized in 1920. She is the most notable Warrior-Saint in the Christian calendar, and the queerest fish among the eccentric worthies of the Middle Ages.—George Bernard ShawWith Saint Joan, Shaw reached the height of his fame as a dramatist. Fascinated by the story of Joan of Arc but unhappy with "the whitewash which disfigures her beyond recognition," he presents a realistic Joan at war, not just with British invaders but with realpolitik. This is a masterpiece of the theater of ideas, presented in the most eloquent, vital, human, and moving terms. Blackstone commissioned this production from the award-winning Hollywood Theater of the Ear.
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Format: audiobook
ISBN:
9781441727824 (1441727825)
Publish date: January 28th 2010
Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks
Edition language: English
Category:
Classics,
Academic,
School,
Literature,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
Plays,
Drama,
Theatre,
Religion,
Ireland,
France
bookshelves: autumn-2011, play-dramatisation, radio-3, published-1923 Recommended for: Brailliant et al Read from October 06 to 13, 2011 A Chronicle Play in Six Scenes and an Epilogue by Bernard Shaw Blurberoonies - Shaw's Saint Joan is the embodiment of absolute conviction. Given, as she believ...
I didn't care much for this play, and the epilogue was completely unnecessary. In fact, for me the epilogue all but ruined what power there was in the play itself. I don't think that Joan of Arc's life can be boiled down into a short play, because there isn't enough time to really get into her hea...
A Chronicle Play in Six Scenes and an Epilogue by Bernard Shaw Blurberoonies - Shaw's Saint Joan is the embodiment of absolute conviction. Given, as she believes, a divine mission to lead the French to victory and nationhood, she is also divinely forbidden to shed a single drop of blood. Her only we...
While listening to the discussion, it occurred to me about three-quarters of the way through our monthly book club meeting that Saint Joan really doesn't seem to be about Joan of Arc at all. As Shaw states in his (lengthy) preface A villain in a play can never be anything more than a diabolus ex ma...
Shaw usually gets tagged as a liberal, progressive, left-wing type, but he was a very idiosyncratic one: you often find things that don't fit the stereotype. In particular, he thought that nationalism was a good thing, and that wars between countries were sometimes good too. This led him to support ...