audience to accept. Priestley uses Goole to voice views which he himself held. Mr Birling says the Inspector was "Probably a Socialist or some sort of crank he talked like one"(p.60). the embodiment of a collective conscience’. Your conscience is the voice within’ which tells you when you are doing something you know to be wrong; Goole performs this role‚ but is a physical manifestation of conscience perhaps the Birlings’ and Gerald’s shared‚ subconscious idea of what conscience’ would look like
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Point 1- Portrayal of Women as Evil Of Mice and Men- “Her body leaned forward” "Feel right aroun’ there an’ see how soft it is." (Direct Attempt of Closeness and Temptation ultimately leads to her downfall – ‘Feel’) Inspector Calls- Eva Smith/ Daisy Renton- Absence throughout play. Lack of Clarity on her name “It’s a favourite haunt for women of the town” (Haunt-Evil and Sinister) Prostitutes Big Idea- Shows women are only for recreation (brothel houses present in both the books)
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Steinbeck and Priestley show this at many points in their texts. Both Eva Smith and Curley’s wife are victims of their class as Eva is victimised by each member of the Birling Family‚ who each make her life harder and each of them are ultimately partially responsible for her death. Inspector Goole also makes it clear to the reader and the Birling family that Eva is the victim when he says ‘A pretty lively sort of girl that never did anybody any harm.’ The character of Eva also conveys how hard life was for
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The poem The Ballad of Calvary Street’ by James Baxter‚ the film American Beauty’ (directed by Sam Mendes and released in 1999)‚ and the play An Inspector Calls’ written by J.B. Priestley and performed at Circa Theatre in 2005‚ are all texts that share a similar theme. Although these three texts are different in terms of authorship and the medium through which the significant messages are communicated‚ what the texts do have in common is that they all convey ideas about how facades and superficial
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How does Priestley present the change in Sheila during the course of the play An Inspector Calls? How do you think this change reflects some of Priestley’s ideas? Initially Sheila is thought of to be quite childish and immature at the start of the play as she teases and has a playful argument with her brother and with her mother telling her off saying ‘’Now stop it‚ you two’’. This resembles an ordinary family and so we can see that Sheila is treated as a child and behaves like one through the use
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As the inspector arrives at the home‚ suddenly we are shown that this respectable’ young man has his own dark secrets. We first see suggestions of this at the dinner table‚ when Sheila (again) asks him where he was last summer‚ and then later Sheila says to him that he must have done things that he was ashamed of‚ he gives himself away immediately by being surprised and on guard because of the comment. What bothers Sheila is maybe not so much that he has a secret but that he is not honest with her
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Mr Birling ‘heavy looking‚ rather portentous man’ ‘a hard‐headed practical man of business’ ‘Yes‚ my dear‚ I know – I’m talking too much.’ ‘perhaps we may look forward to a time when Crofts and Birlings are no longer competing but are working together’ ‘The Germans don’t want war’ ‘unsinkable‚ absolutely unsinkable’ ‘mixed up together like bees in a hive’ ‘community and all that nonsense’ ‘a man has to mind his own business and look out for himself and his own.’ ‘I know the Brumley police officers pretty well’
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knows that Gerald wasn’t doing ‘work’ but he was having an affair with his ‘mistress’ when he’s supposed to be engaged to Sheila. Mrs Birling creates more of a negative force around Sheila by saying‚ ‘It would be much better if Sheila didn’t listen to this story at all.’ I say this because she is ‘supposed to be engaged to the hero of it.’ The quote from Mrs Birling‚ that I have given‚ is followed from the quote by Sheila‚ which I have also provided. This shows that Sheila is being aggravated by the
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believed in very socialist views that are very much about sharing and same values for all. Theses get reflected in the play‚ most notably as his role as the inspector‚ where Priestley most outputs his views in direct contrast with Mr Birling. Priestley portrays Birling as an idiotic capitalist that is very misjudged at common courtesy‚ often mocking him for being very ignorant and the lack of responsibility he(and by extension‚ some of his family) takes when confronted with their wrong-doings. Responsibility
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concerned with public image and pretenses than their relationships to one another. Birling is a “hard headed business man” blinded by his ego and his politics – he thinks “a man has to mind his own business and take care of himself and their own”. Sheila at first seems rather vacuous‚ and is learning to grow out of her giggly immature schoolgirl phase. Gerald is a dandy‚ an aristocrat enforcing the class system. Mrs. Birling is clearly an upper class woman who married for the money and although Eric gives
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