Themes Flashcards
Class
Taking the play from a socialist perspective inevitably focuses on issues of social class. Class is a large factor, indirectly, in the events of the play and Eva Smith’s death. Mrs. Birling, Priestley notes, is her husband’s social superior, just as Gerald will be Sheila’s social superior if they do get married. Priestley also subtly notes that Gerald’s mother, Lady Croft, disapproves of Gerald’s marrying Sheila for precisely this reason. Finally, everyone’s treatment of Eva might be put down (either in part or altogether) to the fact that she is a girl, as Mrs. Birling puts it, “of that class.” Priestley clearly was interested in the class system and how it determines the decisions that people make.
Youth and Age
The play implicitly draws out a significant contrast between the older and younger generations of Birlings.
Arthur and Sybil refuse to accept responsibility for their actions toward Eva Smith (Arthur, in particular, is only concerned for his reputation and his potential knighthood).
Eric and especially Sheila are shaken by the Inspector’s message and their role in Eva Smith’s suicide.
The younger generation is taking more responsibility, perhaps because they are more emotional and idealistic, but perhaps because Priestley is suggesting a more communally responsible socialist future for Britain.
Responsibility
Though responsibility itself is a central theme of the play, the last act of the play provides a fascinating portrait of the way that people can let themselves off the hook.
If one message of the play is that we must all care more thoroughly about the general welfare, it is clear that the message is not shared by all.
By contrasting the older Birlings and Gerald with Sheila and Eric, Priestley explicitly draws out the difference between those who have accepted their responsibility and those who have not.
The Inspector is talking about a collective responsibility, everyone is society is linked, in the same way that the characters are linked to Eva Smith. Everyone is a part of “one body”,the Inspector sees society as more important than individual interests
Cause and Effect
The Inspector outlines a “chain of events” that may well have led to Eva Smith’s death.
Her suicide, seen in this way, is likely the product not of one person acting alone, but of a group of people each acting alone; it resulted from several causes.
If Birling had not sacked Eva in the first place, Sheila could not have had her dismissed from Milwards, and Eric and Gerald would not have met her in the Palace bar. Had she never known Eric, she would never have needed to go to the charity commission.
This series of events is closely associated with Priestley’s fascination with time and how things in time cause or are caused by others.
Time
Time, which deeply fascinated Priestley, is a central theme in many of his works.
He famously was interested in Dunne’s theory of time, which argued that the past was still present, and that time was not linear as many traditional accounts suggest.
An Inspector Calls explicitly deals with the nature of time in its final twist: has the play, we might wonder, simply gone back in time? Is it all about to happen again? How does the Inspector know of the “fire and blood and anguish,” usually interpreted as a foreshadowing of the First and Second World Wars?
The Supernatural
The Inspector’s name, though explicitly spelled “Goole” in the play, is often interpreted through an alternative spelling: “ghoul.”
The Inspector, it seems, is not a “real” Brumley police inspector, and Priestley provides no answer as to whether we should believe his claim that he has nothing to do with Eva Smith.
What are we to make of the police inspector who rings to announce his arrival at the end of the play?
Is the original Inspector, perhaps, a ghost?
What forces are at work in the play to make the Birlings really accept their responsibility and guilt?
Social Duty
“We do not live alone,” the Inspector says in his final speech, “we are members of one body.”
This perhaps is the most important and central theme of the play: that we have a duty to other people, regardless of social status, wealth, class, or anything else.
There is, Priestley observes, such a thing as society, and he argues that it is important that people be aware of the effects of their actions on others.
The Birlings, of course, initially do not think at all about how they might have affected Eva Smith, but they are forced to confront their likely responsibility over the course of the play.
Gender
Because Eva was a woman - in the days before women were valued by society and had not yet been awarded the right to vote - she was in an even worse position than a lower class man. For working class women, a job was crucial. There was no social security at that time, so without a job they had no money.
Quotes about the attitude towards women (theme of gender)
- Mr Birling is dismissive of the several hundred women in his factory: “We were paying the usual rates and if they didn’t like those rates, they could go and work somewhere else.”
- Gerald saw Eva as “young and fresh and charming” - in other words, someone vulnerable he could amuse himself by helping.
- Mrs Birling couldn’t believe that “a girl of that sort would ever refuse money.” Her charitable committee was a sham: a small amount of money was given to a small amount of women, hardly scratching the surface of the problem.