"Birling is a fool" Essays and Research Papers

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    Give advice to the actor playing Mr Birling on how he should present the character to an audience? In this essay I am going to discuss Mr. Birling character in depth and advise the actor who plays him on how he should be presented. Mr Birling is a ‘heavy looking‚ rather portentous man in his middle fifties’ who is head of the family. Since he is next socially superior wife after his wife the actor should have a sense of power and authority in the room and be sat at the head of the table to emphasize

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    Priestley presents the characters of the Inspector and Mr Birling as complete opposites‚ with totally different views and attitudes towards society. The Inspector is a socialist who believes “we are members of one body.” Conversely‚ Mr Birling has very capitalist views and thinks “a man has to mind his own business and look after himself.” Mr Birling is extremely arrogant. He makes very long speeches at dinner‚ discussing matters that the audience would know were incorrect. Priestley uses dramatic

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    A Hero or a Fool

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    Hailey Inge Mrs. Tinquist English II H 12/4/12 [TITLE] It is often an authors perception of a novel that he is creating that shapes the main character of a literary work. The title of a book is the way he focuses all readers in to what is truly important. Like most other authors‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald uses a title‚ The Great Gatsby‚ to represent that some object‚ Gatsby‚ is great. You don’t find out until you begin to read this novel that Mr. Jay Gatsby‚ a poor man from North Dakota‚ is the one

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    Sheila Birling is a character that goes through an intense and rapid character development throughout ‘An Inspector Calls’‚ transitioning from a naïve and privileged upper-class self-centred young lady to a woman who is able to stand up to her parents and present her own opinions representing Priestley’s ideologies of socialism. In Act 1‚ Sheila appears very naïve and obsessed with her engagement. She also goes to lengths to impress Gerald by flirting with him and joking to show him that she is entertaining

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    Sheila Birling; character profile and responsibility Who is Sheila Birling? Sheila Birling is the daughter of Mr Birling of Birling & Co. Sheila is engaged to be married to Gerald Croft of Crofts Limited. She comes from a middle class family however her fiancée is of a higher class then herself. Her traits are depicted early on in the play‚ as she is described at the beginning as “a pretty girl in her early twenties‚ very pleased with life and rather excited”. Although she is described to

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    Fools In The Great Gatsby

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    “Drinking makes such fools of people‚ and people are such fools to begin with‚ that it is compounding a felony” (Robert Benchley). The average person does not always make smart decisions‚ and alcohol tends to worsen that issue. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel‚ The Great Gatsby‚ many characters cope with their problems by drinking their lives away. But‚ what they do not realize‚ is that drinking makes their problems worse and makes their behavior portray them as unintelligent. Through the poor

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    fascinating portrait of the way that people can let themselves off the hook. If one message of the play is that we must all care more thoroughly about the general welfare‚ it is clear that the message is not shared by all. By contrasting the older Birlings and Gerald with Sheila and Eric‚ Priestley explicitly draws out the difference between those who have accepted their responsibility and those who have not. An inspector calls is a murder mystery with a strong moral message set at the peak Edwardian

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    Arthur Birling’s Speech “Good Afternoon everyone‚ I am Arthur Birling‚ I am the owner of Birling and Co‚ which is a factory business company that employs girls to work on sewing machines. I was the Lord Mayor of Brumley two years ago. And I am the husband of Sybil Birling and the father of Eric and Sheila Birling. I speak as a hard-headed businessman who takes his own risks. And I think that poor people should take their own risks as well without any help from the middle and higher class. They

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    DESCRIBE THE ROLE OF THE FOOL IN THE FIRST 2 ACTS ALSO CONTAINS INFORMATION ON ALL OTHER ACTS Superficially‚ the Fool in Shakespeare’s King Lear serves as comic relief‚ abating the dramatic tension with his witty insults and aphorisms. The Fool’s purpose‚ however‚ is not limited to tomfoolery. Ironically‚ he is the most insightful character in the play‚ making sound observations about King Lear and human nature. The full purpose of the Fool is to stress Lear’s poor judgment‚ to contribute to

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    Wise Fools of Shakespeare “Infirmity that decays the wise doth ever make a better fool” – though uttered by one of his own characters Shakespeare does not seem to conform to this ideal. The fools carved by Shakespeare in his plays showed no resemblance to the mentally and physically challenged people who were treated as pets and used for amusement during the medieval period. Rather Shakespeare’s fools appear to be in the best of their wits when they are in possession of the wisest minds. Fools whether

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