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ARTICLE |

A Shavian Pastiche

Arch Intern Med. 1964;114(4):557-559. doi:10.1001/archinte.1964.03860100139020.
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ABSTRACT

Last month we were discussing the circumstances in which George Bernard Shaw wrote his famous play, The Doctor's Dilemma, which he titled against the foibles of the medical profession. In this, as in his other plays, he was a modern Molière (with the same large blind spot as Molière when it came to things medical), attacking the cant and the shams of Victorian customs and institutions. The theater was his arena and the Prefaces his manifesto. In the course of his campaigns he had to cut his way into the contemporary theater, as he put it, "at the point of a pen," and in the process "throw some of its defenders into the moat." Thus he was in good fettle when he got down to the business of his plays. Now, of course, many of the causes which he championed have been quietly won, the more so as succeeding generations

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