РефератыИностранный языкAnAn Inspector Calls Essay Research Paper

An Inspector Calls Essay Research Paper

An Inspector Calls Essay, Research Paper


??????????????????????????????????????????????? ESSAY – AN INSPECTOR CALLSJohn Boynton Priestley was a socialist. He believed


that whether we acknowledged it or not, we are in a community and have a


responsibility to look after others. He wrote "An Inspector Calls" to


highlight these beliefs and share them. In writing this essay, I intend to show


Priestley’s aims in writing the play, how he showed these aims and how


successful he was in conveying his ideas.You can only speculate on the aims of a playwright


in writing a play. In the case of "An Inspector Calls", a valid


speculation would be that the author aimed to educate the audience through the


characters’ realisation of their role in Eva Smith’s demise and thus their


individual responsibility towards other people. ??????????? Arthur


Birling is the kind of character the whole play warns against. "A


hard-headed business man", he believes that society is as it should be.


The rich stay rich, the poor stay poor and there is a large gap between the


two. He believes that "a man has to mind his own business and look after


himself and his own". When put with other things Birling has said in the


play, we see that Priestley’s views do not concur with Birling’s and he has


added statements to make the audience see Birling’s views as false. Birling’s


confidence in the predictions he makes – that the Titanic is "unsinkable,


absolutely unsinkable", that "The Germans don’t want a war. Nobody


wants a war" and that "we’re in for a time of increasing


prosperity" give that audience the impression that his views of community


and shared responsibility are misguided also. Every one of the predictions


Birling makes are wrong; the Titanic sank on her maiden voyage, World War one


broke out two years after the play was set and the American stock market


crashed in 1929, plunging the world into economic chaos. This leads us to


regard him as a man of many words but little sense!??? ??????????? If


we contrast the character of Birling with that of the Inspector, we can see


Priestly’s aims showing. The Inspector is the opposite of Birling. Where? Birling’s predictions are wrong, the


Inspector predicts that if people don’t learn their responsibilities, they will


be taught in "fire and blood and anguish". This prediction refers to


World War I most obviously, but also can refer to World War II. The lessons of


World War I weren’t learnt so the same mistakes were made and another war


started; and though Priestly was unaware of it when the play was written, sixty


years on the same mistakes have caused war after war. This makes his message


just as relevant to the audience of 2001 as to his intended audience. Another


contrast to Birling is that while Birling?


seemingly knows nothing of his family’s affairs, Sheila says of the


Inspector "We hardly ever told him anything he didn’t know". At the end of Act Three,


Birling seems not to have taken any of the lessons of the evening to heart. The


demise of Eva Smith and the part each member of his family played in her death


have not shaken his belief that "a man has to mind his own business and


look after himself and his own?" and that "there’s every excuse for


what? (he and Mrs Birling)? did" In fact, he is more concerned with his


own reputation than with Eva. "?who here will suffer?more than I


will?" He says things that should have been said to him, "you don’t


realise yet all you’ve done…you don’t seem to care about anything", yet


when he says these things, he is of course talking not about Eva Smith, but


about his own reputation and an upcoming public scandal. The attitudes of Mr


and Mrs Birling, and to an extent Gerald, and their willingness to explain away


the? events of the evening to hoaxes and


artfully crafted deception, all go towards the final plot twist – the inspector


is returning to teach the Birlings their lesson again. This ties in with the


idea that if you don’t learn the lesson the first time, you will be taught it


again, through "fire and blood and anguish".The message of the play was


particularly effective to the audiences of 1946. Priestley knew that the


message of his play would reach the war-weary audiences of the era more


effectively than it would reach the audiences of a different time. The


"fire and blood and anguish" reference to the First and Second World


Wars would be very influential to the audience. The setting of the play in 1912


allowed for predictions to be made by both Birling and Inspector Goole. The


intended effect of the predictions was to make the audience see a glimpse of


the kind of person the predictive character is. In the case of Birling, the


audience would see him as a character whose opinion is not to be trusted,


whereas the predictions made by the Inspector chill the audience and make them


see that the lesson he speaks of has been re-taught through fire and blood and


anguish twice already. The audiences had experienced the horrors of war and


were not eager to experience them again, so they may think that if they


followed JB Priestley’s message, they would prevent yet another world war. The play was set in 1912,


and being set at this time, there was not only the opportunity for predictions,


but also for a more drastic look at the relationship between the rich and the


poor. The class gap of 1912 was much larger than that of 1946, and so was more


noticeable to the audiences. With the upper class, we have mentalities like


that of Sybil Birling, who would seem to think that all members of the lower


classes are beneath her and her family. She say to Birling "Arthur, you’re


not supposed to say such things," when he compliments the cook (the cook


being a member of the lower classes). This shows that she believes that the


lower classes are there to serve, not to be thanked or complimented. This is a


strange viewpoint for a "prominent member of the Brumley Women’s Charity


Organisation". With the lower classes however, we have Eva Smith, a young woman


who is shown as the innocent victim of the thoughtless actions of the Birlings.


This contrast is one of many in the play, set up to show one side to be better


than the other. The Inspector against Birling, Eva Smith against Sybil Birling,


Sheila and Eric at the end of the play against Arthur and Sybil, they all show


examples of what Priestley viewed as the Right way agains

t the Wrong way. The


way the latter parties in each contrast I have mentioned act in a way such as


to cause the audience to see them as in the wrong, making the other party


correct. The other parties have views similar to Priestley, so Priestley was


trying to get his message of community and socialism across to the audience


through the actions of the characters.Another of Priestley’s


messages seems to be that there is hope for the future. On seeing how they have


affected Eva Smith, both Sheila and Eric act remorsefully. The character of


Sheila is fairly caring at the beginning of the play, but as events unravel,


and Sheila realises her guilt, her character develops from a fairly naÏve young


girlish character to a more mature, understanding character. This change is so


dramatic that to compare the Sheila who at the end of the play has taken to


heart the Inspectors lessons ("I remember what he said, how he looked, and


what he made me feel. Fire and blood and anguish."), with the Sheila who


had a young girl fired from her job because of her own personal paranoia and


who acted so differently earlier, you would think they were different people.


This is similar to a comparison made between the drunken , playful Eric of Act


1 with the sober serious Eric at the end of Act 3 who has learned that his own


mother played a major role in driving the woman bearing his child to suicide. The results of the


Inspectors visit as regards the younger generation are total metamorphoses of


character. The older generation however don’t see that they have done anything


wrong. Mr and Mrs Birling are all too happy to dismiss the evenings events as


false once the chance appears that the Inspector may not have been a police


Inspector. Their characters stay the same virtually from beginning to end, with


only the short amount of time between Eric’s part in the saga becoming known


and the Inspector showing any waver in their determination that they were


right. The senior Birlings are the examples of the people who will be taught


through "Fire and blood and anguish". This is very different to the


younger generation. "You seem to have made a great impression on this


child Inspector" comments Birling, and is answered with the statement


"We often do on the young ones. They’re more impressionable." This


implies that Priestley is trying to say that there is potential for change in


the "young ones" which is not as evident in the older generation.Priestley’s aims are made


clear by the Inspector largely. As his interactions with the characters go,


Inspector Goole is mysterious. He has a way of making the characters confess to


him, and to themselves, their role in Eva Smiths demise. He links the separate


accounts together to form an approximate biography of Eva Smith from when she


left the employment of Mr Birling up until she commits suicide. Inspector Goole


has another use though – he acts as a social conscience of sorts. He acts as


the voice of Priestley in the play , or the voice of Priestley’s socialist


views. "We don’t live alone. We are members of one body. We are


responsible for each other." He points out that "we have to share


something. If nothing else, we’ll have to share our guilt," and that


"Public men Mr Birling, have responsibilities as well as privileges"


to which Birling replies "?you weren’t asked here to talk to me about my


responsibilities." Contrary to what Arthur Birling believes, it is a very


likely that the Inspector was sent to the Birlings to teach them about


responsibility. The character of Inspector


Goole is mysterious. This air of mystery is intentional. He is mysterious


because of his character. The name Inspector Goole is an obvious pun (Inspector


À spectre, Goole À ghoul). We as an audience never find out who


this Inspector is. There are many possibilities – he could be the ghost of Eva


Smith avenging her death; he could be some form of cosmic balance, keeping


people considerate; he could be amass hallucination brought on by too much


champagne of something in the food. He could be anybody or anything. Priestley


left the character as a mystery so as to have a larger impact on the audience,


making them think more about the play, and helping them think more about the


messages the play brings. Through the Inspector, the audiences are educated in


their social understandings and behaviour, seeing the examples of the Birlings


and hearing Inspector Goole’s prediction. The ending, as I have


already pointed out, symbolises the fact that if you do not learn your lesson


the first time, you will be taught it again and again. It symbolises that you


can’t run from your conscience, as the Birlings will find out. Priestley uses


the dramatic twist of the Inspector returning at the end of the play to


emphasis this point, and makes it more effective by placing it just as the


characters are beginning to relax. It serves to ‘prick’ the consciences of both


the characters and the audience. At the end of reading the


play, I was left feeling as if I would like to think I had learned from the


example of the Birlings and the message it contained. As it is a play though, I


would have liked to see it acted out. The ending is well crafted, leaving an


open ending to add to the dramatic effect, but looking at it differently, there


is not really another way to have ended the play after that plot twist other


than an open ending where it was without ruining the play itself. I think the


majority of people who have seen this play would have liked to think of


themselves as an Eric or a Sheila.The aims of Priestley when


he wrote this play, I believe, was to make us think, to make us question our


own characters and beliefs. He wasted to show us that we can change, and we can


decide which views we side with. He wanted us to ask ourselves if we wanted to


be a Sheila or a Sybil, an Eric or an Arthur. Or, were we in-between like


Gerald. Priestley wanted the audience to learn from the mistakes of the


Birlings. I think that Priestley wanted to make a difference; not a world


changing difference, but a small difference in the way people think. Then, if


you think of every person who coming out of the play gave some money to a


beggar in the street, you would see that?


Priestley did make a difference. It would have changed peoples views on


society, however small those changes would be, and so Priestley achieved his


aims in writing the play.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: An Inspector Calls Essay Research Paper

Слов:2432
Символов:15433
Размер:30.14 Кб.