Class Struggles in the British Empire Displayed in Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw

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Throughout history, people of diverse cultures and different social standings have all shared the common issue of conforming to society's standards, unable fit the mold their community provides for them. The British civilization, the oldest societies recorded in history, has evolved drastically since it’s creation and even this great empire had its own issues with classism. The playwright George Bernard Shaw publicly displays the struggles of the poverty stricken class of the late nineteenth century. Through his underprivileged character, Eliza Doolittle and her desperate attempt to escape her unfortunate stereotype as a woman and as a member of the poor, in his beloved drama Pygmalion.
Eliza, brought up in the “gutter”, accepted to be a participant of Colonel Pickering and Professor Henry Higgins’s phonetics experiment. She originally approached Professor Higgins for tutoring on speech. With better English, she could have the opportunity to move up the social ladder and ultimately escaping poverty, this will give her the chance to seek a better life for herself as someone who works at a flower shop rather than selling flowers on the streets. Throughout time, changing social classes have proven time and time again extremely difficult. People who live in poverty, normally die in poverty because people do not know how to improve their situation without money. Therefore the needy would jump at the opportunity to participate in the experiment. However, Professor Higgins has different opinion on the experiment, partly in order to prove the renowned phonetics professor’s theory that one’s speech places them in their social class (Shaw 1.). Professor Higgins can tell people’s social class by his or her accent and guess where he or she w...

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...st immediately tell her that she could marry and offered her for Mrs. Higgins find her a husband (Shaw 4.). While he does offer for Pickering to find her a job as a florist, he re enforces the idea of marriage (Shaw 4.). In the twenty first century, women could pursue any career she desires while in the past, women were expected to marry and have children. Women who seek a profession are rejected from all fields and opportunity to receive a good education.
Everyone has the same struggle to conforming to society’s unrealistic standards from the great British empire of the nineteenth century to modern day America. When people gain a different social standing, they face great hardship adjusting to the drastic differences between social classes. Through Eliza, Shaw exposes the public to obstacles the penniless have to face when trying to improve the quality of her life.

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