Eva Flashcards
Character in context We never find out Eva’s true identity within the play. This ambiguity enables her to become a universal symbol of oppression. She represents the oppression that both women and the lower classes experienced in early 20th Century society. The audience learns that all the characters have come into contact with Eva and, together, their actions result in her suicide. The Inspector claims that Eva worked for Mr Birling and was fired for striking in favour of fairer wages. Then she worked at a shop, Milwards, where Sheila was instrumental in her dismissal. Next, she had a relationship with Gerald, and then Eric, with whom she became pregnant. Finally, Eva turned to Mrs Birling’s charity committee for aid, yet they rejected her, giving her pregnancy outside of wedlock as the reason. She subsequently committed suicide by drinking disinfectant two hours before the play begins. ➔ Eva symbolises the suffering of the lower-classes. ➔ She is the victim of a patriarchal society and the class inequality which is apparent throughout the social hierarchy of 1912 Britain. ➔ She demonstrates the need for a welfare state
Eva Smith Priestley uses the name Eva as a reference to Eve, the first woman in the Biblical story of the Garden of Eden. She was tempted by Satan to eat fruit from the Forbidden Tree which resulted in Adam and Eve being expelled from the Garden of Eden (this expulsion is often called the fall of man). ● Eve is from the Hebrew “to live” / “source of living” and therefore Eva’s suicide is paradoxical, as the source of living has given up on existence. ● She is a symbol of all those living as Eve is the mother of humanity. Eva is the representation of all humanity, but especially women and those living in poverty. ● While Eve tempted men to corruption through offering Adam the apple in the Garden of Eden, Eva is the opposite of this; she is corrupted by the men in the play. ● She never appears on stage, but is the central figure around which all of the action spins.
The surname Smith ● Priestley uses “Smith” as at the time it was the most common surname in Britain and therefore symbolises the everyday people of Britain. Eva’s story of poverty and suffering is the universal story of the common people. This is demonstrated by the Inspector’s message that “there are millions and millions of Eva Smiths and John Smiths”. ○ ‘Smith’ is a working class name, originating from ‘blacksmith’, and Priestley uses this to demonstrate that her class is a fixed part of her identity and origins, something that she can’t escape. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu ○ In using just two names to represent the entire working class, they lose identity as individuals. This suggests these are people that society has forgotten, or has simply ignored from the start.
Daisy Renton The Inspector suggests that Eva changed her name to Daisy Renton. However, desperately looking for a way to absolve himself of guilt, Gerald argues that Eva and Daisy are in fact two different girls and that the Inspector’s story isn’t true.
Why does Priestley portray Eva under two different names? Priestley uses this name change to demonstrate how Eva felt the need to change the direction of her life in order to survive in a society that is hostile towards people like her. After trying, and failing (as a result of the Birlings), to earn enough money through ‘honest work’ she resorts to prostitution which goes against her own moral principles. ● The name “Renton” is dervived from the verb “rent”, which was a euphemism for prostitution. ● She is forced to rent herself to survive, further lowering her standing in society - in a largely Christian world, prostitution (sex outside of marriage) was seen as sinful, and not viewed as a legitimate job. ● Although she is stigmatised for resorting to prostitution, the men who use her services are, in a sexual double standard, not treated in the same way. ● She is paid for her affection, company and body
Significance of her death Eva’s death is a necessary indicator of the consequences of the other characters’ immoral actions. The worst-case scenario of suicide allows the characters and, more importantly, the audience to understand the fatal impact of careless individualism and capitalist attitudes. Eva Smith found herself in such a desperate situation that she saw suicide as the only way to end her suffering.
Disinfectant Priestley evidences that Eva killed herself with “a lot of very strong disinfectant” demonstrating the deliberate and meaningful attempt to commit suicide. Perhaps Priestley did this to reveal connotations of cleansing and purification that come with disinfectant. The sexual abuse and exploitation that Eva suffered at the hands of Eric and Gerald left her unclean and violated. Therefore, she needed to be purified. Priestley uses of shocking imagery of drinking disinfectant, which “burnt her inside out” to describe her suicide. This associates Eva’s death with hell. The use of the violent verb “burnt” shows the suffering and torture that this death would have caused. The association with hell is linked to the contemporary Christian belief that suicide is a grave sin; committing suicide violates https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu the commandment ‘thou shalt not kill’, which is punishable by an afterlife in hell. The fact that Eva still chose suicide demonstrates that her life was already a living hell, and could imagine nothing worse
Graphic death Priestley deliberately uses graphic language to describe the gruesome death of Eva in order to awaken the privileged upper class audience to the suffering of the working classes. Priestley uses the character of Eva to inflict guilt upon the Birling family to make them repent, change, and ultimately accept responsibility for their actions. He must emphasise and dramatise the suffering they caused for the characters to take any notice; the more brutal Eva’s suicide, the greater the guilt they should feel. After Sheila’s confession, the Inspector reminds her that Eva “died in misery and agony – hating life”. The graphic adjectives “misery and agony” encourage the audience to empathise with Eva, as they would visualise the pain and suffering she had endured at the hands of the Birlings. Priestley intensifies Sheila’s guilt as her enjoyment of life is at the expense of others. Eva’s death is used by Priestley to highlight to the audience the injustice and inequality among the social classes.
Audience reaction Why is her identity never revealed? Priestley does not reveal the identity of Eva Smith as an individual. This allows him to use her as a symbolic representation of the oppressed working class people (the masses). ● If she were given a face, she would become an individual instead of a representation of all who suffer as a result of class inequality and capitalism. ● By keeping her faceless, the audience is encouraged to give her the face of whoever they may have personally impacted through individualistic actions, allowing them to gain a new outlook on their own actions instead of just condemning the Birlings. Perhaps Priestley wants the audience to reflect on whether Eva would have suffered to the same degree in their era. ● This is contextually relevant as the Labour government was on the brink of revolutionising British society when An Inspector Calls was first performed in 1945. The start of the welfare state was well under way (liberal reforms in the early 1900s, the Beveridge Report planning NHS in 1942). ● Therefore, Priestly could be sharing a hopeful message, as the audience should feel optimistic about the improvements society has made since 1912, encouraging them not to fall back to the old ways (like the Birlings do). Priestley allows the story of Eva’s life to be told by other people, encouraging each member of the Birling family to describe their involvement with her in turn. This reflects how her actual life was https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu controlled and dictated by other people, eventually driving her to take her own life. In doing this, Priestley symbolises that the narrative of working class lives are told and controlled by the upper classes, demonstrating the control that the upper classes have over the working class.
Relationship with other characters Parallels to Sheila Priestley establishes parallels between Sheila and Eva to demonstrate that the progression of a woman’s life depends entirely on the family she is born into. It is important to consider why Priestley portrays Eva as similar to Sheila. ● This allows Priestley to comment on the inequality within society, as Sheila’s life is easy because she is upper-class whereas Eva’s life has been full of suffering due to being lower-class. This is luck, something they were born into. ● Their physical descriptions are similar as Sheila is described as a “pretty girl in her early twenties”; while Eva is “twenty-four” and “very pretty”. ● Sheila’s looming wedding and respected husband makes her “very pleased with life and rather excited” by the future, while Eva was so terrified of what tomorrow held that she killed herself, dying “hating life”. ● The contrast between the lives of the two young women is emphasised by making them similar in all ways except class – even down to the men they are connected to: ○ Sheila is engaged to Gerald, while Eva is exploited by him as a mistress. ○ Sheila is related to (and teases) Eric, while Eva is raped by him. Because class is what differentiates them, the audience is given the impression that class determines that Sheila will live an easy, carefree life, while Eva will be subject to constant suffering. This means that Priestley is able to use Sheila as evidence of the divisive nature of social class and how it creates undeserved privilege and undeserved persecution. Priestley uses this parallel between characters to further his agenda of condemning the class system.
Exploited by the patriarchy The way in which Eva is treated by the male characters within the play reflects the patriarchal society of the time. Her value to the male characters is merely a hedonistic (pleasure-seeking) way of fulfilling their lustful desires. They do not value her as an individual, but rather as how she can further their own business success or sexual desires. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu Eva is female and working class, and therefore this makes her among one the most inferior demographics in society. She was sexually exploited and abused by Eric, who raped her. Eva’s vulnerability and economic disempowerment (lack of money) was also taken advantage of by Gerald, who kept her as a mistress. Mr Birling mistreated Eva commercially through exploiting her labour, paying her very low wages. ➔ The male characters see her as a tool, an object. This is evident through their descriptions of Eva as “cheap labour” or a “good sport”. ● Alderman Meggerty had “wedged her into a corner with that obscene fat carcass of his”. Eva was trapped in that corner by Meggerty, just as the upper class traps her and confines her to the working class
Gerald’s exploitation of Eva as his mistress Priestley explores how Eva is kept by Gerald in a possessive fashion as his mistress. It is important to understand how Gerald’s saving of Eva from the Palace Bar is in fact a superficial rescue; it a mere substitution of abusers. Gerald’s lustful desires are evidenced through his predatory description of Eva/Daisy, who is “young and fresh and charming and altogether out of place down there”. The adjective “fresh” bears connotations of desire and fertility, as Gerald views her with sexual desire from the start. Describing her like food makes it clear that he sees her as an object or possession. Gerald’s misogynistic objectification evidences his sinful lust. Priestley also includes connotations of purity as she is “out of place”, which is possibly a euphemism for her still being a virgin. This is reinforced by Eva only recently turning to prostitution. She appeals to him because she seems innocent and sinless, which allows Gerald to disguise his use of prostitution from himself, as Eva’s innocence is refreshing for Gerald, who is used to the “hard-eyed” prostitutes of Palace Bar.
Benefits of her relationship with Gerald (alternative interpretation) It could be argued that Eva actually benefited from her relationship with Gerald and that they had a genuine connection. The Inspector evidences Eva’s joy in their relationship as “she’d been happier than she’d ever been before”. Furthermore, Gerald showed Eva some affection and kindness, as he listened to her and helped her in a time of need. Gerald differs in his treatment of Eva as “he at least had some affection for her and made her happy for a time”. However, his help was self-serving. He is a self-professed “wonderful fairy prince” to Eva. Gerald admits to enjoying his time with Eva and being her knight in shining armour. ➔ Having a relationship with Eva appealed to Gerald at the time, and it was convenient to help her as he was able to use her to satisfy himself sexually whenever he pleased. ○ This allowed him to feel important – like a prince and a saviour. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu Yet, once it was no longer convenient for Gerald, and he could no longer use the excuse of being “busy at the works” instead of meeting Sheila, he says that he “broke it off” with Eva. The use of the verb “broke” suggests a sudden, but casual, action which requires little thought. Eva is grateful to Gerald for his help as he provided her with necessities for her survival; financial aid, shelter, and more importantly, a degree of real human affection. Such basic needs bring her happiness because their fulfilment is foreign to her. She is not used to being treated with any compassion, so a time when she is cared for constitutes the happiest of her life. Eva was “intensely grateful” for his help. Yet she didn’t expect to have any lasting kindness as she “knew it couldn’t last” due to their class differences. It was a novelty for her to feel treated like a human being. Perhaps Gerald did love her and it wasn’t just exploitation. This is evidenced as Gerald leaves, almost immediately after the Inspector asks “were you in love with her?” and Sheila exclaims “just what I was going to ask!” Him leaving could be to avoid the question, which he doesn’t answer, meaning that he may have genuinely loved her. It may also indicate that he is overwhelmed by emotion, having now learned of her death and of his role in it, demonstrating that he does care for her.
Emotional reaction to death Gerald is clearly moved by the news of Eva’s death, feeling guilt and remorse. ● Gerald’s staggered and interrupted speech reveals the true sadness that he feels at her death, as he stammers, “I – well, I’ve suddenly realised – taken it in properly – that she’s dead”. ○ Gerald, however, is clearly attempting to suppress this emotion, eventually “pulling himself together”, as Priestley describes in the stage directions. ● In British patriarchal society of 1912, it was not socially acceptable for men to show their emotions, as being sensitive was considered a feminine trait and was seen to undermine their masculinity and authority. ○ Despite this stigma, he is unable to entirely conceal his emotions, perhaps demonstrating that he had genuine feelings for her. ● It is clear that until this point Gerald hadn’t expressed much remorse over their former relationship. ○ Until it directly affects them, the upper classes ignore the consequences of their actions, allowing them to continue living a life of luxury without guilt.
Final impressions Victim of capitalism Eva is portrayed by Priestley as a victim of the capitalist attitudes held by the upper classes. It is important to understand why Priestley presents Eva as a victim throughout the play. ● Eva is a working class woman and suffers because of it. ● She was fired for asking for a living wage, which is a reasonable request. However, the strikers are not protected and are therefore exploited. ○ All that Eva did was ask for higher wages and the Inspector points out that “it’s better to ask for the earth than to take it”. ○ Mr Birling’s stinginess is forgotten when there is a chance of criminal prosecution, as Mr Birling claims that he would “[unhappily] give thousands - yes, thousands —”. ○ The Inspector reminds Mr Birling that he is “offering the money at the wrong time”; Eva is dead, and he is only moved to help now that his involvement means that his own comfort is threatened, revealing his selfishness. ● All that workers can do is ask for better rights but even this is denied of them as they have no voice. ○ Priestley reflects this through the character of Eva, who also has no voice and no presence in the play. ○ She is powerless to change anything as her story is being told by the upper-class. ○ In a socialist world, this is not so much the case, demonstrated by the Labour government, who would go on to set up trade unions and protect the rights of workers (as the audience knows). Within the play, Eva is essentially killed by capitalism. Through her, Priestley demonstrates the fatal consequences of living by such an ideology in Britain