The History Boys
A mind map on Alan Bennett's play :)
- Created by: Sophie
- Created on: 02-04-13 13:56
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- The History Boys
- Central Conflict - two different educational methods. Hector and Irwin
- Homosexuality
- Not unusual in context. Boys come to terms with in in 'undramatic' way
- For most of boys, experience with homosexualityis just part of them growing up. Some barely affected, and for others (Posner, Dakin?) it has a permanent effect, key in their formative years
- Hector's fixation on boys ~ worships their innocence? Like Lewis Carroll - reference to Alice in Wonderland at beginning
- Excludes Hector. Discussing Hardy, words bring ' a sense of not sharing'
- References Hardy 'Un-kissed. Un-rejoicing. Un-confessed
- Slaughtered Innocence
- Posner reads 'Drummer Hodge' by Hardy to Hector
- Posner is Drummer Hodge - virginal, innocent, abused
- Discussion about the Holocaust
- Posner reads 'Drummer Hodge' by Hardy to Hector
- Setting
- 80s England. Margeret Thatcher. Very democratic 'greed is good;
- Shocking music, bright fashion. Fun. Consumerism central
- Philistine - looked down on cullture
- French conversation interspersed throughout play. Encouraged to indulge in culture, flaunt their intellectualism by Hector
- 80s England. Margeret Thatcher. Very democratic 'greed is good;
- Central aim to get into Oxford or Cambridge
- Seen as 'Ivory Tower' we aspire to. Other people want it so we want it. Sacred.
- Headmaster's concern rests only in League tables
- Headmaster wants students to be 'Renaissance man' - breadth of knowledge, well-rounded. Progression from just History Boys
- Abrupt character. Used to giving orders,, imperative speech. Doesn;t know if Leighton Park is school or prison, detracts from intelligence. Doesn't have worldly knowledge he aspires to
- Headmaster wants students to be 'Renaissance man' - breadth of knowledge, well-rounded. Progression from just History Boys
- Religion
- Repeated Biblical references. (Not just Religion, English mythology rooted in Bible)
- Scripps openly Religious
- Irwin
- Initially viewed as intruder
- When Irwin first meets the boys during Hector's class 'The classroom falls silent at this unexpected intrusion'
- The History Boys
- Central Conflict - two different educational methods. Hector and Irwin
- Homosexuality
- Not unusual in context. Boys come to terms with in in 'undramatic' way
- For most of boys, experience with homosexualityis just part of them growing up. Some barely affected, and for others (Posner, Dakin?) it has a permanent effect, key in their formative years
- Hector's fixation on boys ~ worships their innocence? Like Lewis Carroll - reference to Alice in Wonderland at beginning
- Excludes Hector. Discussing Hardy, words bring ' a sense of not sharing'
- References Hardy 'Un-kissed. Un-rejoicing. Un-confessed
- Slaughtered Innocence
- Posner reads 'Drummer Hodge' by Hardy to Hector
- Posner is Drummer Hodge - virginal, innocent, abused
- Discussion about the Holocaust
- Posner reads 'Drummer Hodge' by Hardy to Hector
- Setting
- 80s England. Margeret Thatcher. Very democratic 'greed is good;
- Shocking music, bright fashion. Fun. Consumerism central
- Philistine - looked down on cullture
- French conversation interspersed throughout play. Encouraged to indulge in culture, flaunt their intellectualism by Hector
- 80s England. Margeret Thatcher. Very democratic 'greed is good;
- Central aim to get into Oxford or Cambridge
- Seen as 'Ivory Tower' we aspire to. Other people want it so we want it. Sacred.
- Headmaster's concern rests only in League tables
- Headmaster wants students to be 'Renaissance man' - breadth of knowledge, well-rounded. Progression from just History Boys
- Abrupt character. Used to giving orders,, imperative speech. Doesn;t know if Leighton Park is school or prison, detracts from intelligence. Doesn't have worldly knowledge he aspires to
- Headmaster wants students to be 'Renaissance man' - breadth of knowledge, well-rounded. Progression from just History Boys
- Religion
- Repeated Biblical references. (Not just Religion, English mythology rooted in Bible)
- Scripps openly Religious
- Focus on getting the boys into Oxbridge - jumping through academic hoops for - ultimately - material gain. Good education - good jobs - good money.
- Encourages them to use different, tactical approach. Say opposite of accepted theory, not because you believe, but to get noticed. Cheating?
- 'Flee the Crowd' 'Be peverse'
- Dakin loves him
- Mimicks Irwin's technqiue, follows it to the letter
- Exams are 'fact of life'
- Initially viewed as intruder
- Hector
- Circle of Trust - locked door. Allows physical contact, un-othodox teaching. Outside world becomes irrelevance. Knowledge they learn in Hector's room has no application to real life
- Believes in perfectibility of man
- Rhetorician, orator - enjoys playing with spoken word
- Sadness of unfulfilled, repressed life
- Death conveys one of central themes - history is largely accidental, and not subject to rational explanations, like some would make out
- The boys are protective over him. Don't want him to get hurt and want to keep him happy
- One of the boys always volunteers to go on 'Pillion Duty'
- Protecting him - see him as inspirational but also flawed 'Don't tell him'
- Believes in learning for the beauty of knowledge, that to have a prupose would defile it
- Exams are 'Enemy of education'
- 'Summer's obligatory hurdles' - purple prose - excessve, uneccessary, fun
- Circle of Trust - locked door. Allows physical contact, un-othodox teaching. Outside world becomes irrelevance. Knowledge they learn in Hector's room has no application to real life
- Exams are 'Enemy of education'
- Parallel to King Lear (Shakespeare) old, venerable. Students compete to show love for him?
- Hits boys. They see this as positive thing ~ shows he cares. Dakin is favourite 'black and blue'
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