64 pages 2 hours read

George Bernard Shaw

Pygmalion

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1913

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Before Reading

Reading Context

Use these questions or activities to help gauge students’ familiarity with and spark their interest in the context of the work, giving them an entry point into the text itself.

Short Answer

1. The title of Shaw’s play is a reference to the Greek myth of Pygmalion. What do you know about the myth of Pygmalion? What happens in the myth? What lessons do you think the myth teaches?

Teaching Suggestion: The myth of Pygmalion is best known from Ovid’s Metamorphoses. In the myth, the sculptor Pygmalion falls in love with a statue of a beautiful woman that he himself had created. Eventually, the goddess of love Aphrodite (or Venus, to the Romans) listens to Pygmalion’s prayers and brings the statue to life. Pygmalion marries the statue-woman, and the two even have a child together. (It is only much later, in Medieval and post-Medieval Europe, that the statue-woman was sometimes given the name Galatea.) Thinking about the literary context behind Shaw’s Pygmalion can help students engage more deeply with the play’s themes.

  • This page on The Victorian Web contains an English translation of the story of Pygmalion from Book 10 of Ovid’s Metamorphoses.
  • This academic article discusses Shaw’s reinterpretation of the myth of Pygmalion as told by Ovid.