English, asked by farheenniyaz435, 3 months ago

according to g b shaw differentiate the method of pin making in earlier and modern times ​

Answers

Answered by vaibhavdantkale65
1

Answer:

This forceful, almost hortatory essay by George Bernard Shaw first appeared in the 13th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1926), the same year Shaw received the Nobel Prize in Literature “for his work which is marked by both idealism and humanity, its stimulating satire often being infused with a singular poetic beauty.” (Shaw, by the way, was proud to point out that in his youth he had read the ninth edition [1875] in its entirety, excepting only the scientific articles.) Shaw wrote superbly, and he was critical of capitalism but also of leftist institutions such as trade unionism. Though his essay concludes on a hopeful note, his analysis is mostly pessimistic: while modern society and civilization itself have fallen prey to unfettered capitalism, the “loss of popular faith in it,” Shaw lamented, “has gone much further than the gain of any widespread or intelligent faith in socialism.” Shaw’s article is nearly as interesting read between the lines, for there is much suggested about the general state of the world in the 1920s. This text, written in an age when the socialist movement was “alive and militant,” may, in view of socialism’s current state of disarray, offer insights different than those originally envisioned by Shaw.

Explanation:

please mark as brainlist bro please

Similar questions