Zusammenfassung der Ressource
AIC-Gender
- context
- women had few rights
- Their main
hope would be
to marry
- significant that Priestley chose to make a
young woman the focus of his play
- underlines the fact that working
class women were perhaps even
more exploited than men.
- For working class women, a job was crucial
- no social security at that time
- so without a job they had no money
- There were very few options open to women in that situation:
many saw no alternative but to turn to prostitution
- Mr Birling
- 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
- Gerald saw Eva as "young and fresh and charming"
- someone vulnerable he could
amuse himself by helping
- He admits to being her
‘Fairy Prince’ for a while
- it is clearly not a relationship of
equals but one in which the man
- Mrs Birling
- Plays a traditional role in the family
- Has no career of her own
- She allows herself to criticise her husband at times
- but on the whole she
accepts that it is a
woman’s role to support
her husband’s career
- She tells Sheila that
men with important
jobs are often
preoccupied with
them.
- job more important than wife
- 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.