3. Modern Texts ( AQA GCSE English Literature )

Revision note, an inspector calls: overview.

The An Inspector Calls question is part of Paper 2, Section A of your GCSE. For this, you are required to write one essay-length answer to one set question. This can seem daunting at first, but this page contains some helpful information, and links to more detailed revision note pages, that will enable you to aim for the highest grade. This page includes:

Who was J.B. Priestley?

An Inspector Calls plot summary

  • A brief overview of what is required in the exam

An Inspector Calls characters

An Inspector Calls context

An Inspector Calls themes

An Inspector Calls quotes

Top tips for the highest grade

John Boyton Priestley was an English novelist, playwright, screenwriter and broadcaster. Priestley was born in Bradford, England on 13th September 1894 and died at the age of 89 on the 14th August 1984. Priestley’s career as a playwright began in the 1930s and theatre became the form for which he was most renowned. 

An Inspector Calls is Priestley’s best-known and most-performed play and was written in 1945. 

Many of Priestley's plays were associated with 'drawing room' theatre which emerged during the Victorian period, whereby the events occur in a single room which would have been intended to be recreated in one’s own house. This genre of plays was developed as a result of the widespread practice of entertaining visitors at home during this time and is clearly evident in An Inspector Calls, whereby all of the action takes place in the Birlings’ dining room. Priestley was also interested in subverting narrative structures and in the theories of time and An Inspector Calls is typically seen as one of his 'Time Plays', in which the characters are encouraged to look back at their past actions.

Social responsibility in An Inspector Calls is a recurrent theme throughout many of Priestley’s plays and it is one of the most prevalent themes within An Inspector Calls, with the role of the Inspector used to highlight that all actions have consequences. For further ideas about this theme and others explored in the play, please see the An Inspector Calls: Themes page.

An Inspector Calls is a three-act play set in the dining room of the Birlings, an affluent family living within the fictional and industrial city of Brumley, in the north of England. The play is set in 1912, just two years before the First World War. Inspector Goole is the stranger who visits the affluent Birling family and confronts them with their complicity in the suicide of a young woman named Eva Smith. 

Inspector Goole arrives just as the Birlings are celebrating Sheila Birling and Gerald Croft's engagement. While the Inspector informs that a young woman committed suicide by drinking disinfectant, the family is bewildered as to how they are connected. As the plot progresses, each character begins to realise their connection to Eva, and as the play concludes and the mysterious Inspector departs, an ominous phone call notifies them that another police inspector is on his way. For a more detailed summary, please see the An Inspector Calls: Plot Summary page.

How is An Inspector Calls assessed in the exam?

  • Your GCSE Paper 2 requires you to answer four questions in 2hr 15min. Within that time, you have approximately 45 minutes to plan, write and check your An Inspector Calls essay
  • Paper 2 is worth 96 marks and accounts for 60% of your overall GCSE grade
  • The An Inspector Calls essay is worth 34 marks in total, because it also includes 4 marks for spelling, punctuation and grammar
  • Section A of Paper 2 contains the An Inspector Calls question and you are required to answer one question on the play from a choice of two 
  • It is a closed-book exam, which means you will not have access to a copy of the text in your exam (and there is no printed extract from the text on your question paper, unlike in Paper 1)
  • You will be asked a question that asks you to analyse and write in detail about an aspect of An Inspector Calls
  • Your answer will need to address the play as a whole

For a much more detailed guide on answering the An Inspector Calls question, please see our revision notes on How to Answer the Modern Prose and Drama Essay Question .

The characters you should focus on when revising An Inspector Calls are:

  • Arthur Birling
  • Sybil Birling
  • Sheila Birling
  • Eric Birling
  • Gerald Croft
  • Inspector Goole

When considering Priestley’s play, or any other text, it is critical to understand that characters are deliberate inventions made by a writer for a purpose. These characters frequently represent concepts or belief systems, and a writer, such as Priestley, uses them to explore these ideas and views. For more details on the characters in An Inspector Calls, please see the An Inspector Calls: Characters revision notes page.

At GCSE, it can be difficult to understand what context actually is. Examiners define context as the ideas and perspectives addressed by a writer through their text, not as historical information or facts and details about a writer. Therefore, for the An Inspector Calls context you should not write information about England in 1912, or facts about Priestley’s life, but instead refer to ideas about:

  • Capitalism and Socialism 
  • Responsibility

Lots of these ideas and perspectives are universal, so your own opinions of them are valid, and will be rewarded in an exam. For a detailed breakdown of the contextual topics listed above, see the An Inspector Calls: Context page.

Understanding the themes in An Inspector Calls is one of the best approaches any student can take when revising the play. This is because to get the highest mark on your exam, you need to take what examiners call a “conceptualised approach”: a detailed and perceptive exploration of Priestley’s ideas and intentions. The key themes in An Inspector Calls are:

  • Capitalism versus Socialism
  • Generational divide
  • Guilt 
  • Class 

There are of course more themes than just those listed above that are investigated by Priestley in An Inspector Calls, and you are encouraged to explore these too. However, the above list makes a great place to start, and detailed breakdowns of each of these themes can be found on our An Inspector Calls: Themes page.

Although you are given credit for including quotations from An Inspector Calls in your answer, it is not a requirement of the exam. In fact, examiners say that “references” to the rest of the play are just as valid as direct quotations: this is when students pinpoint individual moments in the play, rather than quoting what the characters say. In order to select references really successfully, it is extremely important that you know the play itself very well, including the order of the events that take place in the play. This detailed act-by-act breakdown of the plot will help you to revise the chronology of An Inspector Calls.

However, it can also be useful to revise a few quotations from the play that can be used in a variety of essays on different themes and characters. For an analysis of each of these quotations, see our An Inspector Calls: Key Quotations page.

Please see our revision pages on the modern text exam for guides on:

  • Structuring your An Inspector Calls essay
  • An Inspector Calls methods and techniques
  • How to include context in the An Inspector Calls essay
  • Understanding the An Inspector Calls mark scheme
  • An Inspector Calls model answer

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Keep an eye out for An Inspector Calls games, puzzles and quizzes throughout the site

Below, you'll find everything you need to revise for an inspector calls - and if you need anything else, just let me know and i'll do my very best. it's what i ask of you, and so it's only right that i offer it in return....

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Key Themes:

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Responsibility

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Capitalism vs Socialism

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Dramatic Devices

an inspector calls essay questions gcse

Revision Materials:

Essay titles, you should base your revision around these essay titles., if you can plan an essay for each of these you'll definitely have something great prepared whatever comes up in the exam....

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Revision Guide English An Inspector Calls AQA

Revision Guide English An Inspector Calls AQA

Subject: English

Age range: 14-16

Resource type: Assessment and revision

Mr Lindley's Shop for English

Last updated

15 August 2024

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an inspector calls essay questions gcse

A revision/activity booklet that prepares students for an AQA English Literature Paper 2 GCSE exam question on ‘An Inspector Calls’ by J.B. Priestley.

The booklet includes the following to support students in their exams:

  • Example questions
  • Mark scheme for the question
  • Sample responses
  • 10 quotations for each key character
  • Contextual links and J.B. Priestley’s intentions
  • Interesting phrases for students to use in their response
  • Sentence starters and a PETAL paragraph guide
  • Key themes of the play
  • Summary of the plot
  • Key terminology/writer’s methods

Comes with a front cover and back cover. Each question comes with ‘Your Turn’ activities for the students where they are asked to complete tasks that encourage active revision rather than passive reading for revision. The booklet has been made in colour, but could easily be printed in black/white (16 pages in total).

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COMMENTS

  1. AQA English Revision

    AQA English Revision - Essays. An Inspector Calls Essays. One of the best things you can do to revise for any English exam is to read examples of essays. Below you'll find a range of essays which you can read at your leisure. Though there are always benefits in reading essays, becoming use to "active reading" is also important.

  2. An Inspector Calls

    How far does Priestley present Eric as a character who changes his attitudes towards himself and others during the play? How does Priestley explore the importance of social class in. Next question. Questions and model answers on An Inspector Calls for the AQA GCSE English Literature syllabus, written by the English Literature experts at Save My ...

  3. An Inspector Calls

    Your GCSE Paper 2 requires you to answer four questions in 2hr 15min. Within that time, you have approximately 45 minutes to plan, write and check your An Inspector Calls essay. Paper 2 is worth 96 marks and accounts for 60% of your overall GCSE grade. The An Inspector Calls essay is worth 34 marks in total, because it also includes 4 marks for ...

  4. PDF Question paper: Paper 2 Modern texts and poetry

    Instructions. Use black ink or black ball-point pen. Do not use pencil. Write the information required on the front of your answer book. The Paper Reference is 8702/2. Answer one question from Section A, one question from Section B and both questions in. Section C. You must not use a dictionary.

  5. PDF Question Bank

    page 6. page 7. page 8. Please note: these questions have been written and formatted in the same style as AQA exam questions. You can use them to help with extract questions and timed essay practice. These questions have NOT been taken from past papers and they have NOT been made by AQA. 1. 1. Accountability.

  6. Sample Answers

    Sheila uses the metaphor 'not to build a wall'. She is trying to tell her mother not to stop the Inspector's inquiries, but Sybil Birling does not understand and she is annoyed. She is also rude to the Inspector, saying that his comments are 'a trifle impertinent'. The word 'impertinent' shows how her attitude to others is a ...

  7. An Inspector Calls

    Here are a range of essay questions for J.B. Priestley's play 'An Inspector Calls' — suitable for students at GCSE and IGCSE level (Edexcel, AQA, OCR, CIE/Cambridge, CCEA, WJEC, Eduqas exam boards). This ** digital + printable pdf resource** includes: 3 PASSAGE BASED QUESTIONS 12 WHOLE TEXT QUESTIONS. BONUS MATERIAL

  8. AQA English Revision

    Keep an eye out for An Inspector Calls games, puzzles and quizzes throughout the site. Below, you'll find everything you need to revise for An Inspector Calls - and if you need anything else, just let me know and I'll do my very best. It's what I ask of you, and so it's only right that I offer it in return...

  9. PDF An Inspector Calls

    Weighting: 60% of the English Literature GCSE You must answer four questions in total: one from Section A, one from Section B and two from Section C. This is a closed text exam, so you will not be able to use the texts. Section A - 'An Inspector Calls'. (30 marks plus 4 marks for SPaG = 36 total) You have a choice of two questions.

  10. How to answer an 'An Inspector Calls' question

    This is a 4-paragraph structure that works well for evaluation questions ('How far…'). This structure is useful for theme questions, if you want to make different points about how that theme is presented. Below are a couple of example essay plans using the structure above. The first uses a (Beginning / Middle / End) structure and the ...

  11. Essay questions

    Author. J.B. Priestley. Title. An Inspector Calls. A useful set of comprehension and essay style questions covering individual acts and the play as a whole. Great to encourage notetaking during reading or as revision after reading the text. 15.56 KB. Free download. 28.5 KB.

  12. GCSE English Literature

    These essays conform to the official Pearson Edexcel IGCSE specification, with questions closely mirroring those in actual exams. Each essay has been rated at a grade 9 standard by teachers. Buy this set now to enhance your vocabulary, grammar, and overall English skills, and raise your English Literature grade to a 9.

  13. An Inspector Calls: One FULL Essay Plan Which Fits EVERY GCSE Question

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  14. An Inspector Calls: Essay Writing Guide for GCSE (9-1)

    Sample from the Guide Foreword. In your GCSE English Literature exam, you will be presented with two questions on J. B. Priestley's An Inspector Calls, and you will then be asked to pick just one to answer.Of course, once you've picked the question you prefer, there are many methods you might use to tackle it. However, there is one particular technique which, due to its sophistication ...

  15. Revision Guide English An Inspector Calls AQA

    A revision/activity booklet that prepares students for an AQA English Literature Paper 2 GCSE exam question on 'An Inspector Calls' by J.B. Priestley. The booklet includes the following to support students in their exams: Example questions; Mark scheme for the question; Sample responses; 10 quotations for each key character

  16. PDF Question Bank

    7. Inspector Goole page 5 Please note: these questions have been written and formatted in the same sty le as AQA exam questions. You can use them to help with extract questions and timed essay practice. These questions have NOT been taken from past papers and they have NOT been made by AQA. www.pmt.education 1

  17. AQA GCSE English Literature : An Inspector Calls Flashcards

    An Inspector Calls was written after World War Two. As many British men went away to fight during the war, their positions in work had to be filled by women. This helped change existing perceptions. Men had to acknowledge the fact that women were just as capable as them. As a result of this, many women enjoyed a newfound freedom that working ...

  18. " An Inspector Calls " GCSE exam-style essay questions

    Download Free PDF. View PDF. A I spector Calls GC"E exa -style essay questions: You will be given a choice of EITHER a passage-based question (the passage will be printed in the exam paper) or an essay question which should be based on the whole play, NOT on the printed passage. In the exam you have 45 minutes to plan, write and check your ...