Saturday, January 25, 2020
An Inspector Calls Essay -- English Literature
An Inspector Calls    'An Inspector Calls' is a play written by JB Priestley in 1945 and set  in 1912. Priestley demonstrates his concern with moral responsibility  and his beliefs in Socialist values through the character of the  Inspector, whom he uses as a mouthpiece throughout the play. He voices  his opinions on these issues using this technique, and they are shown  by the way the Inspector deals with the Birling family and are  exemplified by the obstacles to social harmony in which the Inspector  has to face before coming to a suitable and justifiable conclusion.    The play was written in 1945 - within a week of World War Two ending -  but set in 1912, when Britain still had its Empire and was doing very  well financially. The time span between the two dates is Priestley's  way of expressing a feeling of urgency he thought necessary to pass on  to society after the events of 1945.    Although the war had ended, society in Britain in 1945 was still  experiencing the hardships that it had brought. New books were printed  under the wartime economy regulations, continuing the shortage of  paper and therefore resulting in the books being expensive - too  expensive for any working class person to purchase.    However, in 1912 some things were different. Society did not have the  burden of the war hanging over their heads, but life for the poor did  not differ much from 1945. Edwardian society was strictly divided into  social classes; below the very rich were the middle classes, such as  doctors, merchants, shop workers and clerks. After that came the  craftsman and skilled workers, and at the very bottom of the social  ladder was the largest class of all - the ordinary workers and the  poor, many of whom lived below the poverty...              .... It is also contradictory to a section of  one of Arthur Birling's speeches: "By the way some of these cranks  talk and write now, you'd think everybody has to look after everybody  else" which is the complete opposite to what the Inspector is  announcing.    The passage also anticipates World War One, in the sense that at the  very end, the Inspector says "if men will not learn that lesson, they  will be taught it in fire and blood and anguish" - this, to the  Birlings, is a prophetic statement, but the reader and audience are  aware of it as it has already come to pass. To emphasise that idea,  the Inspector lengthens the list of words he mentions; instead of just  using a comma between "fire" and "blood", he chooses to use 'and',  which sensationalises the comment and makes it sound somewhat more  important than if he had just normally listed those specific words.                      
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