An Inspector Calls: Sheila Birling

Descripción

GCSE English Literature Mapa Mental sobre An Inspector Calls: Sheila Birling, creado por zahra.123 el 22/05/2013.
zahra.123
Mapa Mental por zahra.123, actualizado hace más de 1 año
zahra.123
Creado por zahra.123 hace más de 11 años
725
0

Resumen del Recurso

An Inspector Calls: Sheila Birling
  1. THESIS STATEMENT: she supports a socialist view & gradually becomes more confident
    1. Sheila is described in the author's notes to be "very pleased with life" which shows her to be a girl who doesn't seem to have many issues in life
      1. She is cautious even in the beginning of the play & can tell that something is up with Gerald: "(half serious, half playful) Except for all last summer, when you never came near me"
        1. She is easily impressed & is pretty materialistic, therefore doesn't show much care about more serious things in life. This can be observed in the way she doesn't comment during the men's conversations: "I think it's perfect. Now I really feel engaged"
          1. She is genuinely distraught about hearing about Eva Smith & some of it turns into regret: "I can't help thinking about this girl - destroying herself so horribly - & I've been so happy tonight"
            1. She is quick to stand up for the girl who were fired from her father's company: "But these girls aren't cheap labour - they're people"
              1. She begins to speak her mind more as the play continues & often retaliates to what the others say: "(to Birling) I think it was a mean thing to do"
                1. She is not one to underestimate the Inspector's intelligence: "Why - you fool - he knows"
                  1. She abused her power to make up for her insecurities: "I went to the manager of Milwards and I told him that if they didn't get rid of that girl, I'd never go near the place again & I'd persuade my mother to close our account with them"
                    1. She does regret what she did in Milwards: "I felt rotten about it at the time and now I feel a lot worse"
                      1. She is angered at how Gerald, Mr & Mrs Birling refuse to take responsibility: "(bitterly) I guess we're all nice people now"
                        1. She refuses to forget what she has learnt tonight: "But that won't bring Eva Smith back to life, will it?"
                          1. She understands what the Inspector's plan is - to make them confess one by one: "He's giving us the rope - so that we'll hang ourselves"
                          Mostrar resumen completo Ocultar resumen completo

                          Similar

                          An Inspector Calls Revision Notes
                          Noor Sohail
                          The Captain of the 1964 Top of the Form Team
                          Summer Pearce
                          Hamlet - Character Analysis
                          Jess Watts
                          Sheila Birling Quotes
                          Joe Blockley
                          The Duchess of Malfi Critics Quotes
                          Biha Saeed
                          The Merchant of Venice - Act 1 - Plot
                          bill fingleton
                          The Merchant of Venice Relationships
                          Antonia Blankenberg
                          Macbeth Act One - scene summaries
                          Ashleigh Huddart
                          Relationships in Pride and Prejudice
                          Antonia Blankenberg
                          A Taste of Honey - Characters
                          Evan Barton
                          Romeo and Juliet plot
                          Jadey Gemini