Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Meaning Of An Inspector Calls by J.B. Priestley :: Papers
 The Meaning Of An Inspector Calls by J.B. Priestley         J.B.Priestley's "An Inspector Calls" is a good play that attacks the     social problems of its time; it contains all the ingredients of a     well-made play. This is because it is very dramatic, and it has the     attention of the audience. It gets this by the use of climaxes, the     slow plot of a detective with persevering style.     Despite this the author is concerned with the darker side of the     world. The play is Priestley's attempt to try to say this. Priestley     sees the country as not very truthful and neglecting its     responsibilities. The members of the Birling family are only concerned     with them selves over others. They are responsible for the young     woman's' death by treating her different; and show what Priestley is     trying to say, and is fighting against.     " An Inspector Calls" is a well-made play because it contains many     factors that sustain attention of the audience.     One of the factors that makes the play captivating is the use of     climax, the way it keeps the audience on the edge of their seats all     the way through; it is quite slow to gather the plot and then finally     has a powerful climax, for example the way the Inspector extracts     small pieces of information from the family and slowly puts the     picture together and narrows it down to the guilty person as the     climax. He misleads the family until they are all contradicting one     another.     He keeps the audience guessing all the way through the play, and as     clues are solved the culprit becomes clearer, but as soon as one     thinks he or she knows who it is Priestley cleverly switches to     another character. This makes the audience very interested in the     action that is happening.     The strange appearance of the Inspector when the Birlings are having a     celebration party, and Mr Birling is giving a speech on how the modern     man should be. The Inspector steps in almost as he was prepared to     challenge Mr Birling; this seems to bring up facts about the    					    
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