Today I explained to you that 'An Inspector Calls' follows in the tradition of the morality play, an ancient form of production that makes statements about good and evil/right and wrong through allegory.
A definition of the term allegory and the PowerPoint we looked at in class can be found below. You should have been taking your own notes in your jotter, but it might be helpful to look over them again.
- ALLEGORY:
Allegory is a figurative mode of representation conveying meaning other than the literal. It teaches a lesson through symbolism. Allegory communicates its message by means of symbolic figures, actions or symbolic representation. An allegory in its most general sense is an extended metaphor.
Examples: The recent film 'District 9' explores the concept of apartheid in South Africa through allegory; instead of the races being separated, the human species is separated from an alien civilisation who are kept in shanty towns.
'Wall-E' is another example of an allegory. It explores the idea of love overcoming everyday monotony; the two robots are represent humans trapped in a lifelong pattern, which is thrown off by their love for each other.
"I realized the point I was trying to push with these two programmed robots was the desire for them to try and figure out what the point of living was...It took these really irrational acts of love to sort of discover them against how they were built...I realized that that's a perfect metaphor for real life. We all fall into our habits, our routines and our ruts, consciously or unconsciously to avoid living. To avoid having to do the messy part." -- director Andrew Stanton
Morality in ‘An Inspector Calls’
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