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The Foundations (An Extravagant Play) cover

The Foundations (An Extravagant Play)

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About This Book

The play stages a single summer evening in an upper-class household and the adjoining working-class milieu, moving between the mansion's cellar, a Bethnal Green room, and an ante-room. Interactions among the aristocratic family, their servants, and impoverished neighbours expose social contrasts, wartime memories, and simmering unrest: a child's fascination with a found explosive becomes a motif for threatened upheaval while servants recall equality in the trenches and contemplate escape. Scenes dramatize anti-sweating campaigns, class hypocrisy, generational innocence, and the uneasy postwar order, unfolding across three acts as satirical social critique that balances intimate domestic moments with public tensions.

About the Author

Galsworthy, John portrait

John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy was an English novelist and playwright, best known for his literary exploration of social issues and the human condition. His most notable work, the Forsyte Saga, delves into the lives of a wealthy family in Victorian England, highlighting themes of class and morality. Galsworthy's writing is characterized by its keen observation and rich character development, often reflecting his own experiences and the societal changes of his time. In addition to his novels, he contributed significantly to the theatre with plays such as "A Family Man" and "The Complete Plays of John Galsworthy." His works remain an important part of early 20th-century literature, showcasing the complexities of human relationships and societal expectations.

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