Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Inspector Goole
- The name
- Sounds like 'spectre' and 'ghoul' which are ghostly
words and suggest he is a supernatural, ghostly being
- Explains his constant references to Eva's death
- Explains how he can see into the future and predict the war
Anmerkungen:
- "The time will come when, if men will not learn that lesson, then they will be taught it in fire and blood and anguish."
- Predicts Eva's death before it happens
- Onmiscient
- Is summoned when Birling does his
capitalist speech about no responsibility,
like the Inspector will teach him a lesson
- Talks about seeing Eva's body, maybe he was
summoned when she died to punish those who hurt her i.e
the Birlings. He exists because of her death, she was first
thing he saw when he was summoned from spirit world
- An inspector is someone who examines
things closely, this is what Goole does
- Represents Priestley's socialist views
- Contrasts in opinion with Birling - a capitalist man whose views are
the opposite to his - and this alludes to their contrasting beliefs
- Talks about social
responsibility; Priestley was a
left-wing supporter too
- Priestley shows the Inspector to have the correct view, as he
undermines Birling and makes him look like a fool e.g Titanic, so
that Birling's capitalist views are undermined and look foolish too
- The Inspector tries to change
Birling's mind about responsibility a
lot, but Birling doesn't budge
- Conflicts with Birling, not intimidated by him
- Priestley mocks Birling's capitalist values with irony when Birling wants
everyone to be investigated at the same time, in an equal, socialist way
- A catalyst
- Speeds up a reaction
without being
permanently altered
itself
- The only character who isn't affected by
the inquest into Eva's death
- As he enters, stage lights are made brighter, suggesting light
is truth or responsibility, and he is bringing the light into the
morally wrong way the Birlings live, represented by darkness
- Insists on characters hearing the stories of
Eva from other characters so they are more
likely to reveal theirs, so he is a catalyst
because he moves the story along quickly
- Represents the working
class [with Eva]
- The Birlings expect him to be intimidated when they drop names
but he ignores them and treats them as he would with any other
member of the public, regardless of their social standing
Anmerkungen:
- "I'm still on the Bench, so I know the Brumley police pretty well." (Birling)
"My husband was Lord Mayor only two years ago and he's still a magistrate." (Mrs Birling)
- Lower class than the Birlings
- Social commentator
- Treats others
equally in
accordance with
his socialist
morals
- Opposed to sexist way the Birlings live e.g when
they send out the women so as not to scare them
- Points out that the capitalist 'look after your own'
way means they are selfish and don't think about
others, even if they were similar to their own family
members e.g Sheila and Eva
Anmerkungen:
- "Your daughter isn't living on the moon. She's here in Brumley too."
- Wants to show they all have responsibility and are
"members of one body".