mrs birling and class

Cards (126)

  • Who is Mrs Birling married to?
    Mr Birling
  • Who are the children of Mrs Birling?
    Eric and Sheila
  • What public role does Mrs Birling hold?
    She sits on the council for charity organisations
  • How does Priestley use Mrs Birling as a symbol?
    To represent the hypocrisy of the upper classes
  • What does Priestley reveal about Mrs Birling's nature through stage directions?
    She is described as "about fifty, a rather cold woman"
  • What does Mrs Birling's character represent about the upper classes?
    She represents their selfish nature, privileges, and prejudices
  • How does Mrs Birling perceive the working classes?
    As inferior
  • What does Priestley depict about domestic life in the early 20th Century through Mrs Birling?
    He shows the inequality between men and women
  • What convention does Mrs Birling adhere to after dinner?
    She goes to the drawing room while men discuss politics
  • Who initiates the exit from the dining room?
    Mrs Birling announces it is time for her and Sheila to leave
  • What does Mrs Birling's commitment to the patriarchal status quo lead to?
    Her complicity in her own oppression
  • How does Mrs Birling view marriage?
    As a means to secure financial security and social status
  • How does Mrs Birling react to Gerald's affair?
    She shows indifference to it
  • What does Priestley imply about Mrs Birling's cold nature?
    It is irrational and unnatural
  • How does Mrs Birling respond to Sheila's distress about Eva's suicide?
    She is unsympathetic
  • What does Mrs Birling believe about the nature of marriage?
    It is a transaction rather than centered around love
  • How does Gerald cover up his affair?
    By telling Sheila he’s “busy at the works”
  • How does Mrs Birling view men's sexual desires?
    She believes they should be accepted and satisfied by submissive women
  • How does Mrs Birling perceive Eva's suicide?
    As Eva's own fault
  • What is Mrs Birling's view on the Inspector's message of collective responsibility?
    She rejects it and denies her role in Eva's death
  • What does Mrs Birling believe about class inequalities?
    That they did not cause Eva’s death
  • How does Mrs Birling view displays of emotion?
    As a sign of weakness
  • How does Mrs Birling attempt to silence Sheila?
    By telling her she’s behaving like a hysterical child
  • What does Priestley suggest about the use of hysteria in the play?
    It is used to control women and prevent them from gaining power
  • How does Mrs Birling view the suffrage movement?
    As undermining traditional gender roles
  • What does Mrs Birling believe about women's roles in society?
    They should be moral and domestic, excluding themselves from politics
  • Why does Mrs Birling resist societal change?
    Because she is privileged and her lifestyle is threatened
  • How does Priestley depict the marriage between Mr and Mrs Birling?
    As a transaction rather than based on love
  • What does Mrs Birling's criticism of Mr Birling reveal?
    Her shame of his lower-class origins
  • How does Priestley describe the Birling household?
    As "heavily comfortable" but not "cosy or homelike"
  • What does Mrs Birling's avarice demonstrate?
    Her greed for wealth
  • How does Mr Birling's cupidity manifest?
    In his proclamation that Sheila's marriage to Gerald is "one of the happiest nights of my life"
  • What does Priestley suggest about the upper class's happiness?
    That wealth does not bring them happiness
  • How does Mrs Birling justify denying Eva Smith financial aid?
    By claiming she did her duty
  • What does the Inspector's role contrast with Mrs Birling's view of duty?
    He believes his duty is to ask questions about morality
  • How does Mrs Birling's character remain static throughout the play?
    She remains ideologically the same
  • What does Mrs Birling's stubbornness reveal about her character?
    Her confidence in her own superiority
  • How does Mrs Birling view her actions towards Eva Smith?
    She convinces herself she has no reason to be responsible
  • What does Priestley use Mrs Birling to symbolize?
    The upper classes' resistance to change
  • What challenge does the Birling family's comfortable lifestyle face?
    Socialist change and greater social responsibility