/
Remind yourself of the ending of the play from “The telep Remind yourself of the ending of the play from “The telep

Remind yourself of the ending of the play from “The telep - PowerPoint Presentation

luanne-stotts
luanne-stotts . @luanne-stotts
Follow
372 views
Uploaded On 2017-12-08

Remind yourself of the ending of the play from “The telep - PPT Presentation

How do you respond to this as an ending to An Inspector Calls and how does Priestley make you respond as you do by the way he writes The Ending is a sudden reversal of fate This reversal of fate or Denouement is typical of a well made play and adds to the gravity of the ending by cruelly s ID: 613639

birling inspector fact play inspector birling play fact links ironic supernatural arthur learn fate reversal left theme respond goole

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Remind yourself of the ending of the pla..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Remind yourself of the ending of the play from “The telephone rings sharply… to … the curtain falls.”

How do you respond to this as an ending to

An Inspector Calls

and how does Priestley make you respond as you do by the way he writes?Slide2

The Ending is a sudden reversal of fate

This reversal of fate, or Denouement is typical of a well made play and adds to the gravity of the ending, by cruelly shocking the characters.

This has the effect of a justice type message, with no one escaping their just deserts in the end. This links to the theme of morality throughout the play. It also dramatically increases the tension.

The ending is particularly hard on Arthur Birling, who had in act 3 been boasting about how they had been duped.Slide3

The Ending is strongly ironic.

The ending is ironic because it leaves Birling speechless

at the crime he thought he had gotten away with.

This is furthered by the fact that Arthur and Sybil Birling and Mr Gerald Croft hadn’t learned from the lessons that the Inspector attempted to teach them.

However it comes as no surprise to Sheila and Eric who had been saying that they should accept the responsibility for their crimes.Slide4

The ending is cyclical

The ending loops round to the beginning, with the Birlings in much the same position as when they began.

This links to Priestley’s socialist ideals: he wants society to learn from the Second World War in the same way as the Birlings should learn from the advice the Inspector gave them, as well as development in their characters in the case of Sheila and Eric.Slide5

Supernatural

The theme of supernatural is never directly approached although the Inspector’s name, Goole, which is a homonym of Ghoul, is highly suggestive.

The phone call after the Inspector has left brings wild conspiracists to believe that time has possibly stood still for the duration of the encounter with Inspector Goole.

The fact that the ‘real’ police have called after the ‘fake’ Inspector has left also hints at an otherworldly being, when combined with the fact that he mysteriously seemed enlightened as to everyone’s actions involving Eva Smith