Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The History Boys - Revision
- Characters
- Posner
- Posner is in love with
Dakin. He watches and
follows him. Dakin is aware
and unintresed.
- Posner is aware that Irwin is facinated by Dakin
too - Because he notices him watching Dakin
aswell
- Posner doesn't fit in with the others. He is not accepted by
Hector in the same way - He is never picked to ride on the
bike.
- Lockwood, Akthar and Crowther
- The other three boys are not
established as strong personalities.
Appropriatly they become
Magistrates and Headmasters in
their careers.
- Timms
- Timms is the class clown.
he teases Irwin in particular-
although it is Dakin that gets
told off for it.
- Headmaster
(Felix)
- The headmaster is
presented as a fool. His
attitude towards
Oxbridge is mocked by
the other teachers.The
boys share the teachers'
low opinion of him, for
example when they trick
him about their French
Lesson.
- He is a hypocrite,
as revealed by
Dakin blackmailing
him, The hypocrisy
is also evident
when the
headmaster does
not want to sack
Hector, asking him
to resign instead,
making it easier for
himself.
- He is the stereotype of a
particular kind of
headmaster, who is out of
contact with the students,
but pretends that he isn't.
- Irwin
- irwin is only a few years older than the
boys, Employed specifically to get the
boys into Onbridge, he pretends to have
been to oxford.
- irwin is attracted to Dakin. He does not
want to be like Hector, but is unable to
resist when Dakin offers himself to him.
irwin is diffrent to Hector in that it seems
the boys have power over him, both in
lessons and when dakin approaches
him.
- Irwin is not a very
sympathetic character:
his cynical side is
emphasised from the
opening scene, as a
spin-doctor. he does
not help Posner when
he confesses his
troubles with Dakin. But
he gets the boys into
Oxbridge. His method
worked.
- he teaches the boys to
approach history in a way
which can be seen as a game
- taking an original approach
by simply arguing the opposite
to what the normal belief is.
They take it as a game.
- Mrs Lindtot
- She contributes to the themes both of the role of a
woman and to what history is. she tells the boys that
women have been excluded from their view of history,
and that their view of life is too male-centric. as the
obly woman who appears on stage she shoes that the
world of the school is an unnatural one.
- The boys' original history
teacher, Mrs Lintott has got them
excellent A level grades by
concentrating on facts.
- She is used to create humor in the
play. for example she often shocks
by using taboo language to describe
the head.
- she is aware of the line
between pupils and
teachers. She advises Irwin
that it is hard for pupils to
learn that teachers are
human beings- but that it is
very inportant for teachers
not to try to tell the pupils
that they are.
- She is a cynical observer of what happens in
the play. She functions as a confidante for the
other teachers. She is excluded from their
power strugglr so is seen as neutral
- Rudge
- Rudge is the least academically able of
the boys. The teachers regard him as a
lost cause, and are very surprised
when he gets in.
- Rudge is patronised by students
and teachers, but he is not stupid.
He knows that they do so, and
challenges it at the end, winning a
cooncession from Mrs Lintott
- He is the most hardworking, as
shown by the effort he puts into
writing down and doing what his
teachers says.
- Hector
- He is
charistmatic,
eccentric and
refuses to conform
to modern
teaching, or to the
Headmaster's
desires for
Oxbridge places.
- he inspires the boys - they
are deeply influenced by his
opinions on art and
literature. Mrs Lintott
reflects that hector is
frequently remembered with
great affection in the Old
Boys' newsletter.
- he is a paedophile. he
encourages the boys to
ride pillion on his motorbike
and then touches them up.
The boys see this as a
price to pay.
- Hector teaches the boys large
chunks of literature by heart, but
doesn't see that they should be
used. he doesn't like irwin's
approach, whiich he sees as
mere journalism.
- Dakin
- Dakin is the leader
of the boys. He is
Hector's and irwin's
favourite. Posner
loves him. Dakin is
the most advanced
of the boys.
- Dakin uses sex to get what he wants
- he manipulates both hector and
Irwin. He offers himself to Irwin as a
reward or thank you for helping him
get his scholarship to Oxford.
- It is Dakin who gets Hector
reinstated at the school, by
blackamiling the Head about
his behaviour towards
Fiona.
- Dakin doesn't really care about other
people, for example his careless attitude
towards Posner, and the way he talks
about Fiona. His eventual career as a Tax
Lawyer, or at least Mrs Lintott's reaction to
it, suggests he is not a very moral person.
- Scripps
- Scripps acts as a narrator in the play.
He introduces a number of scenes and
some of the characters. His role is also
to reveal the thoughts of some of the
characters.
- Both Dakin and
Posner tell him
things, and
therefor us. this
works because
although Scripps
observes and
reports, he does
not really take
much part in the
action.
- Plot
- Plot Summary
- hector is discovered to be groping the boys
and asked to leave. he is allowed to stay to
the end of the term, sharing his classes with
Irwin.
- At the end of the play the boys get
into university. hector gives a lift to
irwin,whick ends in a
accident.Hector is killed and Irwin is
left in a wheelchair.
- Play Structure
- The play is divided into two acts- before and
after the interval.
- Apart from that it is divided into scenes
which are not numbered. Each bullet
point represents a scene
- Context
- Alan Bennett
- Well known British writer.
- Born in 1934
- attended a grammar
school in Leeds and
then Oxford University.
- Differences between the book and the film
- What happens to Posner rat the end.
- Amount of characters that appear.
- The setting: the book is limited to mainly the
school grounds.
- Criticisms of The History Boys
- Based on Bennets own
experiences of sixth form in
the 50's
- Its unlikly students in a
sixth form have never
been sent to Onbridge
before.
- accused of having things
placed in the wrong time
period.
- Although set in the
80's its pop culture
references are from
the 40's and 50's
- Themes
- What is History?
- History Repeats itself
- Hector suggests that
this also happens in
school, as boys
come and go.
- Irwin suggests that history
repeats itself, with his
instructions to study Henry VIII to
find out about any period in
history.
- The history in the play isn't
accurate either. it contain
anachronisms. This implies
that history is not
necessarily accurate either.
- The play takes
place in the past
so what happens
is already set. The
boys are also
studying History.
- Irwins wheelchair
is echoed
- The boys futures
are echoed
- The role of a women.
- Mrs Lintott
- The teacher who got
them excellent A level
results, is not regarded
enough to get them
into Oxbridge.
- Fiona
- Used as a sex object.
- In History
- Mrs lintott points out their
university interview may be by a
woman, this seems strange to
the boys.
- Her and
Rudge
represent
people who
are under
represented
in the study of
History.
- All male environment is
unnatural, the boys view
of history is male
dominated.
- Boys view of
women is entirely
sexual
- What is a good Teacher?
- Irwin
- He is a hypocrite who
challenges but does not offer
a truthful alternative.
- He is barely a teacher at all.
- Hector
- he inspires but educates with no particular aim
in mind, it appears. He reveals towards the end
of the play he never meant to be a teacher, but
only intended to do it for a short time.
- Mrs Lintott
- She got the boys
through their A levels
with factually accurate
answers, but it is
implied early in the
play that this is not
enough. She is the
only devoted teacher.
- The Headmaster.
- what do the boys learn from their differentteachers?
- By a crude measure of success,
the teaching must all be good -
they have good A levels and all get
into Oxbridge. All are successful in
life with one exception. But
Posner's failure cannot be soley
attributed to his teachers.
- What is education?
- The Boys
- They have a fairly
cynical attitude to
education. Their
approach is to please
whichever teacher is in
the room at the time.
- Mrs Lintott
- Education is about truth. She worries
about hector's emphasis on art,
suggesting that in her past experience
pupils who didn't succeed academically
were therefore assumed to be artists
- Irwin
- he says education is
all about getting the
results you want.
- He is accused of
delievering journalism rather
than history - something
which is flashy rather than
something which is serious.
This is supported by his
later jobs.
- He doesn't
think that
there is a
truth or if
there is, it is
nothing to do
with
examinations.
- Hector
- Hector regards exams
as the enemy of
education. It can be
seen as an approach
which values the really
important things that
education offers rather
than turning them into
tools to pass exams.
- He says the reason for
education is to pass it on,
preserve the learning.
- The Headmaster.
- Main concern is league table results.