Socialist Standard (est 1904)
Official journal of the Socialist Party a companion party of the World Socialist Movement
www.worldsocialism.org/spgb  100 years for socialism-> -> Standard Online->->Connecting with->-> socialists->-> worldwide       February 2005



Contents
Editorial Here

COVER STORY

Aftermath of the Tsunami:Querying "American Values in Action".
$350m for tsunami aid,.$150b for war in Iraq,just what aer the Whte House priorities?John Bissett examines US values in the global arena

Here 

FEATURES

Floods of Tears
 Here

A 'Free'Press
Is it really possible to have a free press in capitalism,or will the' independant' media always and inevitably dance to the tune of vested interests?Steve Trott investigates   Here

Reform ,Revolution and the Left
 
Most people can think of aspects of  capitalism that they'd like to change.Individual changes can theoreticallly be made,but does reformism work as an overall strategy for real change? Here

Should the Left consider Socialism?
Everybody's a socialist these days but only becaus the meaning has been taken out.Richard Montague looks at what's Left.  Here

A 'Socialist' Leader
Bertie Aherne calls himself the last 'socialist' in Irish politics,but the media don't take him seriously and neither argues,Kevin Cronin,should we.
Here
REGULARS
Editorial Here

Pathfinders Here

Red Snapper  Here
+ Newsflash

Cooking The Books 1...+
Cooking The Books 2...

Both on... ...Here

Reviews   
    Books Review  tv review 

Meetings...Here

50 Years Ago...Here

Greasy Pole...Here
Voice From The Back...Here
with Free Lunch


Drama review

‘Journey’s End’ by R.C. Sherriff. The Duke of York’s Theatre, London.

Once there was a war in which men walked into battle kicking footballs, with rum on their last dying breaths, lead by officers in riding breeches carrying silver-topped canes. Whilst equal through the sights of a Maxim gun, in the last analysis class separated them as effectively as no-man’s-land kept them apart from the enemy. Although the ordinary Tommy or Hun possessed some degree of loyalty to their officers, class underpinned all social relationships to the extent that the average soldier often felt more in common with his enemy counterpart than with his own superiors.

     This, of course, was the First World War, in which R. C. Sherriff’s play Journey’s End is set. As a teenaged officer, Sherriff saw action at the Somme and later at Passchendale where he received a ‘Blighty’ (was wounded badly enough to be sent back to Britain). Thus his play has what Remarque’s contemporaneous All Quiet on the Western Front also has: the authority of first-hand experience. Indeed, the believableness of the play is one of its strengths. Set solely in a front-line dug out, the story concerns the relations between a group of officers as they await the start of Germany’s 1918 Spring offensive. Raleigh, a rosy-cheeked 18-year-old fresh from the playing fields of Eton or Harrow, meets Stanhope, his childhood hero from school and now a hard-bitten whiskey-driven veteran of 21, who immediately resents the return of the fawning teenager into his life. The laid-back leadership style of 40-year-old Osborne, ‘Uncle’ to the youngsters, affects a calming influence as he comes between the petulant youngsters like a relentlessly understanding class tutor. ‘Dear old Uncle, tuck me up’, says an exhausted Stanhope from his bunk and in a moment of tenderness it’s as if a patient father is putting to bed his straying but essentially decent son. The play concludes with a touching reconciliation between Stanhope and Raleigh before the naïve youngster’s inevitable death.

       But a play about the officer class would not be complete without its representatives of the common soldiery. After all, the officers need their servants and clowns as much as Shakespeare’s aristocrats needed their Bottoms, Pistols and Porters. Sherriff gives us Trotter and Mason, the former a mercilessly chirpy Cockney promoted from the ranks to officer status who walks eye-deep in hell with a song and a smile; the latter the dug-out dogsbody treated like a servant even in these conditions and whose lines mainly concern the dietary requirements of the officers. There is something comical about these two characters, something of the Sam Weller ‘wery pleased to make your haquaintance, sah’, something you are meant to laugh at. This only may be to provide some light relief for the fraught situation, but you are not meant to laugh at the other characters – you are meant to understand and empathise with them. Being working class, at best they are shrewd but, lacking the formal education of the others, contribute little to the gravitas of the play other than to make remarks such as ‘these hapricots is gorn orf, sah’. One would not want an Owen to walk into the trenches to teach Tommies socialism, however, for it would not work in the context of the play. Journey’s End after all is concerned solely with the officer class and so there is not the space for serious and intelligent working class characters (whereas there is in Miles Malleson’s Company D and Black Ell). Unfortunately, 75 years after the play opened, there still seems little room for serious and intelligent working class characters in theatre, film and TV. But that’s another story.

       Despite this, Sherriff’s play is a powerful and memorable piece of theatre which succeeded to entertain and move its audience. Whilst relegating the noticeably working class characters to minor or frivolous roles, it does offer what is probably a faithful account of upper-class men at war.

NW