An Inspector Calls - CONTEXT

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Mind Map on An Inspector Calls - CONTEXT, created by Rhi akai on 06/02/2018.
Rhi akai
Mind Map by Rhi akai, updated more than 1 year ago
Rhi akai
Created by Rhi akai almost 7 years ago
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Resource summary

An Inspector Calls - CONTEXT
  1. J. B. Priestly: Context behind the drama
    1. John Boynton Priestley was born in Yorkshire in 1894. He knew early on that he wanted to become a writer, but decided against going to university as he thought he would get a better feel for the world around him away from an academic community. Instead, he became a junior clerk at 16.
      1. When World War 1 broke out, he joined the army and escaped death many times. After the war, he gained a degree from Cambridge University, moving to London to become a writer. He wrote successful articles and published his first novel in 1929. He wrote his first play in 1932 and went on to write 50 more. Much of his writing was controversial. He included new ideas about possible parallel universes and strong political messages.
        1. Priestley wrote 'An Inspector Calls' after the First World War and like much of his work contains controversial, politically charged messages. He set 'An Inspector Calls' in 1912 because that era represented the opposite of what people were hoping for in 1945.
          1. During World War 2, he broadcast a popular weekly radio show which was attacked by the Conservatives for being too left-wing. The programme was eventually cancelled by the BBC for being too critical of the Government.
    2. Priestly's Political Views
      1. In the 1930's, Priestley became very concerned about the consequences of social inequality. During 1942, he and others set up a new political party, the Common Wealth Party, which argued for public ownership of land, greater democracy, and a new 'morality' in politics. The party merged with the Labour Party in 1945, but Priestley was influential in developing the idea of the Welfare State which began to be put into place at the end of the war.
        1. He believed that further world wars could only be avoided through cooperation and mutual respect between countries, and so became active in the early movement for a United Nations. And as the nuclear arms race between West and East began in the 1950s, he helped to found the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, CND, hoping that the UK would set an example to the world by a moral act of nuclear disarmament.
      2. Comparing 1912 and 1945
        1. J B Priestley wrote An Inspector Calls after the First World War and like much of his work contains controversial, politically charged messages. An Inspector Calls is set in 1912, it was written in 1945. This table describes what society was like in 1912 and 1945
          1. 1912
            1. First World War starts in two years. Birling's optimistic that there would not be a war is wrong.
              1. There were strong distinctions between the upper and lower classes.
                1. Women were considered to be lower than men. All a well off women could do was get married; a working woman was seen as a poor person.
                  1. The ruling classes saw no need to change the status quo.
                  2. 1945
                    1. The Second World War ended on 8 May 1945. People were recovering from six years of warfare.
                      1. Class distinctions had been greatly reduced as a result of two world wars.
                        1. As a result of the wars, women had earned a more valued place in society.
                          1. There was a great desire for social change. Immediately after The Second World War, Clement Attlee's Labour Party won a landslide victory over Winston Churchill and the Conservatives.
                        2. Priestley deliberately set his play in 1912 because the date represented an era when all was very different from the time he was writing. In 1912, rigid class and gender boundaries seemed to ensure that nothing would change. Yet by 1945, most of those class and gender divisions had been breached. Priestley wanted to make the most of these changes. Through this play, he encourages people to seize the opportunity the end of the war had given them to build a better, more caring society.
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