How does Eva Smith's name symbolize her role in the play?
Eva is a reference to Eve, the first woman in the Biblical story of the Garden of Eden, and Smith is a common working class name, symbolizing that Eva represents the oppression of women and the lower classes
What is the significance of Eva Smith changing her name to Daisy Renton?
The name change demonstrates how Eva felt the need to change the direction of her life in order to survive in a society that is hostile towards people like her, and the name "Renton" is derived from the verb "rent", which was a euphemism for prostitution
How does Eva Smith's death symbolize the consequences of the other characters' immoral actions?
Eva's suicide is a necessary indicator of the fatal impact of the characters' careless individualism and capitalist attitudes, as her desperate situation led her to see suicide as the only way to end her suffering
What symbolic meaning does Priestley convey through Eva's method of suicide?
The use of disinfectant to commit suicide suggests connotations of cleansing and purification, as the sexual abuse and exploitation Eva suffered left her unclean and violated, and she needed to be purified
Why does Priestley use graphic language to describe Eva's suicide?
Priestley uses graphic language to describe Eva's gruesome death in order to awaken the privileged upper class audience to the suffering of the working classes, and to emphasize and dramatize the suffering they caused to make the characters feel greater guilt
Why does Priestley never reveal Eva Smith's true identity?
Priestley does not reveal Eva's identity so that she can be used as a symbolic representation of the oppressed working class people, rather than an individual, allowing the audience to give her the face of whoever they may have personally impacted
How does Priestley use the parallel between Sheila and Eva to comment on inequality in society?
Priestley establishes parallels between Sheila and Eva to demonstrate that a woman's life depends entirely on the family she is born into, as Sheila's life is easy because she is upper-class while Eva's life is full of suffering due to being lower-class, showing how class determines privilege and persecution
How do the male characters in the play exploit and objectify Eva?
The male characters see Eva merely as a tool or object to fulfill their lustful desires or business interests, as evidenced by their descriptions of her as "cheap labour" or a "good sport", and their sexual exploitation and abuse of her
How does Gerald's relationship with Eva/Daisy demonstrate his misogynistic objectification of her?
Gerald's lustful, predatory description of Eva/Daisy as "young and fresh and charming" and his view of her as an object or possession shows his misogynistic objectification, and his "rescue" of her from the Palace Bar is merely a substitution of abusers
What are the key ways in which Eva Smith symbolizes the oppression of women and the lower classes?
Eva represents the oppression that both women and the lower classes experienced in early 20th Century society
Her suicide demonstrates the fatal impact of the characters' careless individualism and capitalist attitudes
Her name "Eva Smith" references Eve from the Bible and a common working class surname, symbolizing her as a universal symbol of oppression
Her change of name to "Daisy Renton" shows how she felt the need to change her life to survive in a hostile society, with "Renton" being a euphemism for prostitution
How does Priestley use the character of Eva Smith to convey his social and political message?
Eva symbolizes the suffering of the lower classes and the need for a welfare state
Her death is used to highlight the injustice and inequality among the social classes
Priestley keeps her identity ambiguous so she can represent the "millions and millions of Eva Smiths and John Smiths", encouraging the audience to reflect on their own impact
The parallels between Eva and Sheila demonstrate how class determines privilege and persecution, allowing Priestley to condemn the class system
The male characters' exploitation and objectification of Eva reflects the patriarchal nature of society at the time
What is the significance of the Inspector's message that "there are millions and millions of Eva Smiths and John Smiths"?
This message suggests that Eva's story of poverty and suffering is the universal story of the common people, and that the narrative of working class lives are told and controlled by the upper classes