ABSTRACT
George Bernard Shaw’s political comedies, The Apple Cart and On the Rocks, explore loopholes of representative democracy and Shaw’s prospect for reformative dictatorship as an alternative. The Apple Cart reveals the political apathy of English people with all good social welfare in the late twentieth century, which naturally leads to the parliamentary politics controlled by powerful conglomerates. In On the Rocks, representative democracy fails to address extreme unemployment, and the reform plan of the prime minister, Sir Arthur, faces opposition from both the labor class and the conservative. Therefore, Shaw hints at the temporary necessity for reformative dictatorship within constitutional limits.
adult suffrage, representative democracy, reformative dictatorship, labor class, plutocracy, The Apple Cart, On the Rocks, Fascists, totalitarianism
Copyright © 2024 The Pennsylvania State University.
2024
The Pennsylvania State University
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