Pygmalion

audiobook

Pygmalion

by Bernard Shaw

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

In bustling London at the turn of the century, a brilliant but blunt professor of phonetics makes a daring wager: he will teach a common flower‑seller from the streets of Covent Garden to speak and behave as if she were a lady of society. His belief in the power of language to reshape identity fuels the experiment, and the play opens with a lively clash of theory and everyday life, as the professor outlines his audacious plan.

The unlikely partnership that follows spins into a witty, sharp‑tongued examination of class and prejudice. As lessons progress, the flower girl’s quick mind and unvarnished humor challenge the professor’s assumptions, while both discover that mastering speech does not instantly grant the grace or acceptance they imagined. Shaw’s sparkling dialogue and keen social commentary make the first act a sparkling portrait of ambition, humor, and the surprising elasticity of human nature.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (187K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-03-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Bernard Shaw

Bernard Shaw

1856–1950

Known for witty, talkative plays that poke at class, politics, and human vanity, he helped reshape modern drama. His work ranges from sharp comedies to serious social critique, with "Pygmalion" remaining one of the best known.

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