Wednesday, June 10, 2020
How Bennett and Spark Present the Lasting Influence of Teachers and Their Ideals - Literature Essay Samples
ââ¬Å"Give me the child for seven years and I will give you the man.â⬠In The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark and The History Boys by Alan Bennett, the authors are seen to be ââ¬Å"playing with timeâ⬠[1] by using flash-forwards and flash-backs to show the lasting influence of their characters. By showing them during and after being influenced these texts foreground the theme of the positive and negative effects of influence and how this can shape young minds. For instance, Sparkââ¬â¢s use of juxtaposition between scenes of early influence with later effects show that ââ¬Å"there [always] was a certain Miss Jean Brodieâ⬠. Muriel Spark and Alan Bennett show the effects of long term influence of those who see teaching as a performance and how those who they influence are their audience. Ideally Hector would never have chosen to influence anyone especially not on his most favoured subject: ââ¬Å"words, said in that reverential way thatââ¬â¢s almost welshâ⬠. Yet, he does influence every boy that he teaches. Not that he would ever mean to but he can ââ¬Å"passâ⬠¦onâ⬠his knowledge and passion without giving a second thought. This is probably because of his passion about his loved subjects. ââ¬Å"The classroom is a stageâ⬠[2] for Hector (Miss Brodie too), and the students are an audience who are idolising a great actor. After all, ââ¬Å"Hectorâ⬠is but a character played by the true man: ââ¬Å"Douglasâ⬠who shares no qualities with the character he plays at all. It may well be that Hector hopes not to inspire because he knows that he should not inspire because while Hector can inspire, he knows that Douglas could never influence because he has ââ¬Å"pissed [his] life awayâ⬠. Sparkââ¬â¢s character is much like Bennettââ¬â¢ s in that they she is an actor on ââ¬Å"a stageâ⬠[3]; ââ¬Å"She is lost in her own romantic fantasiesâ⬠[4], so much so, that she struggles to see the difference between reality and fantasy and if she cannot see the difference then neither can the girls. Maybe that is why she chooses to inspire because she cannot see what is stopping her. Brodie cannot see that she is not a star on the stage, to her, she is the closest thing to ââ¬Å"Anna Pavlovaâ⬠that the girls are going to get. And if she is Pavlova then her girls must follow in her footsteps. If they donââ¬â¢t then they are not ââ¬Å"dedicated womenâ⬠. However, unlike Hector, Spark shows a character that tries too hard to inspire greatness and her legacy is just a fantasy in the girlsââ¬â¢ minds. While at school she was inspiring but as the girls left, so did the fantasy of Miss Brodie because it was a fantasy that needed perpetuating by her students; unlike Hectorââ¬â¢s legacy which lived after h um because he himself did not perpetuate the fantasy of Hector- it was the boys that were inspired by him that perpetuated the fantasy of Hector. Spark and Bennett both explore how their teachers inflict their personalities and how their personalities leave a lasting influence on their pupils. Brodie had a profound influence on her ââ¬Å"setâ⬠and each girl was influenced distinctively and yet they ââ¬Å"remained unmistakeably Brodieâ⬠. The two girls where this is most prevalent are Rose Stanley, who, like Miss Brodie ââ¬Å"was famous for sexâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"Sandy Stranger, the clever, imaginative oneâ⬠[5], who was probably the most like Miss Brodie, although, nobody sees it, Sandy is the most observant; this ability to observe almost turns her into Miss Brodie. She is the girl with the qualities of Miss Brodie. Similarly, in The History Boys Posner is most influenced by Hector and ends up becoming just like him. Neither of the students had a choice in their personalities in later life as they had somebody elseââ¬â¢s inflicted on them at an ââ¬Å"impressionable ageâ⬠. Posner is unaware that Hector is influencing him, however, Sandy is fully aware of Miss Brodieââ¬â¢s influence and tries to avoid it; yet, the more that Sandy tries to avoid becoming like Brodie, the more similarities occur because she is ââ¬Å"impressionable and powerlessâ⬠[6]. The girls who allowed her influenced only became a part of Miss Brodie whereas the one girl who least wanted to be influenced, Sandy, became almost completely like Miss Brodie. Sandyââ¬â¢s betrayal of Miss Brodie probably best shows how much like Brodie she is; she is ââ¬Å"flatteningâ⬠Brodie ââ¬Å"beneath the chariot wheelsâ⬠. Brodieââ¬â¢s statement of the girls being ââ¬Å"mine for lifeâ⬠really shows with Sandy because even as an adult she is avoiding becoming like her former teacher by becoming a nun. However, despite Brodie not liking her career choice, Sandy is still ââ¬Å"unmistakeably Brodieâ⬠because she became a ââ¬Å"dedicated womanâ⬠which was always Brodieââ¬â¢s biggest desir e for the girls. The ââ¬Å"unmistakeably Brodieâ⬠statement used by Spark carries a distinct message, that these girls have a false sense of self. They all believe that they have their own personalities which Spark shows by the girls placing their hats in different ways. Their self-identity is an illusion. Much like Spark, Bennett shows his protagonist students being distinctively influenced. Posner was influenced by his long-time teacher, Hector and Dakin was influenced by Irwin. Not only were the boys influenced by their teachers but they, like Sandy, became just like their teachers. While at school, Posner excelled, leaving top of the class with ââ¬Å"a scholarshipâ⬠; Dakin did also excel, just not quite as well as Posner, coming away with ââ¬Å"an exhibitionâ⬠(effectively second place to Posner). Although Headmaster believes that ââ¬Å"he doesnââ¬â¢t produce resultsâ⬠, Hector is the one who influenced Posner to success and made him a more well-rounded individual. He achieved this despite everything that Hector taught being ââ¬Å"useless to the school as a schoolâ⬠. If Posner was not as ââ¬Å"vastly informed on a lot of subjectsâ⬠then he would not have had as much academic success. Although as Headmaster says, the results are ââ¬Å"unquantifiableà ¢â¬ which is Bennett showing that if put against each other multiple times, Hector may not always defeat Irwin because Hectorââ¬â¢s method is ââ¬Å"unquantifiableâ⬠or, more simply, unreliable. While Dakin was at school he took success from Irwinââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"side doorâ⬠method which worked for him because the method is just like him, itââ¬â¢s flashy and yet it works. It quickly gets him to the top and, like Irwin, thatââ¬â¢s all Dakin needs. When Dakin says ââ¬Å"I didnââ¬â¢t know I could think like thatâ⬠heââ¬â¢s becoming more like Irwin, clearly, however, for Dakin, becoming like Irwin isnââ¬â¢t that much of a change. Therefore, Dakin is an outlier in the two stories, Posner was moulded to become like Hector, Sandy was moulded to become like Miss Jean Brodie but Dakin, while becoming like Irwin, ultimately became an, arguably, better version of himself. As James Middleton says ââ¬Å"Posner, [is] perhaps the most fragile of the boysâ⬠[7] and consequently he is easily moulded by someone as charismatic as Hector: his fragility is his downfall. He ends up living as a recluse having ââ¬Å"periodic breakdownsâ⬠and ââ¬Å"keeps a scrapbook of â⬠¦ his one-time classâ⬠. Hectorââ¬â¢s influence makes him academically successful but he could never make him socially successful because he taught ââ¬Å"insulationâ⬠from the real world. Here, influence is a malicious force as it enhances the vulnerability in Posnerââ¬â¢s character rather than challenging it. Hector may stifle Posner but Brodieââ¬â¢s influence is fatal for Joyce Emily. She takes a vulnerable child who seeks belonging and sends her to a war zone where she dies. Miss Brodieââ¬â¢s self-glorifying representation of being a war-hero is, perhaps, the most difficult aspect of her to sympathise with. For many of the students ââ¬Å"it was not always comfortableâ⬠to be influenced. Unlike any of Sparkââ¬â¢s or Bennettââ¬â¢s other students Dakin chose to be influenced, knowing that Irwinââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"side doorâ⬠method would get him to the top. Although Bennett paints Irwin to be the ââ¬Å"villain of The History Boysâ⬠[8], David Greenberg is right in saying that Irwin is ââ¬Å"the better teacherâ⬠[9] because he can teach success and he can inspire. He creates well-rounded people and minds, whereas Hector can only create well-rounded minds. Although Irwinââ¬â¢s influence on the surface appears second rate given that Posner got a ââ¬Å"scholar shipâ⬠and Dakin only an ââ¬Å"exhibitionâ⬠Dakin succeeds in life. Although as an audience people want to side with Hector (much like they do with Miss Brodie) it must be said that there was one teacher where no student left him hurt or damaged. Hector ruined Posnerââ¬â¢s life leaving him ââ¬Å"shrivelled and betrayedâ⬠and although Sandy got her own back on Miss Brodie she still was left with Brodieââ¬â¢s mark. So, despite even Bennettââ¬â¢s best efforts to make Irwin seem like the worst teacher, he, much to the dismay of many audiences, turns out on top. However, there is evidence within The History Boys to support that Hector may actually be the better teacher. Bennett himself claims that Hector is the ââ¬Å"better teacherâ⬠[10] providing the boys with an education that gave Posner a ââ¬Å"scholarshipâ⬠and them all with a well-rounded knowledge in the class given ââ¬Å"the euphemistic titleâ⬠¦ of general studiesâ⬠. The boysââ¬â ¢ extra-curricular knowledge is best shown when they are in Irwinââ¬â¢s class, or in their entrance examinations, where Hectorââ¬â¢s true benefit on them can be seen in a wider context. He allows them to conquer the class prejudices of the 80s and it is thanks to him that these working-class boys break into ââ¬Å"Oxbridgeâ⬠Paradoxically he claims to insulate the boys from the outside world when he decides to ââ¬Å"lock the doorâ⬠, however, in reality, his influence takes its true effect when the door has been unlocked and the boys have been let away from Hectorââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"pactâ⬠. Bennett and Spark both tackle whether or not a teacher should live vicariously through their students. In The History Boys Hector ââ¬Å"used to think [he] could warm himself on the vitality of the boysâ⬠, meaning that he believed that his pupilsââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠would bring him out of feeling like something made him ââ¬Å"piss [his] life awayâ⬠. However , he later discovers ââ¬Å"that doesnââ¬â¢t workâ⬠and warns Irwin against living vicariously. Itââ¬â¢s possible that Miss Brodie lives vicariously through her girls because nobody warned her that it ââ¬Å"doesnââ¬â¢t workâ⬠. However, in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and The History Boys, ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠means different things. In The History Boys, ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠is what Hector takes from the boys during ââ¬Å"Pillion Dutyâ⬠and because it ââ¬Å"doesnââ¬â¢t workâ⬠he has to keep doing it to keep him going. ââ¬Å"Vitalityâ⬠for Hector is a drug. Whereas ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is more of a shared experience, it works between the ââ¬Å"setâ⬠and Miss Brodie. The girls receive excellence from being one of Brodieââ¬â¢s girls and therefore Brodie is given excellence. However, when the girls are gone there is no excellence but only for Brodie; the girls kept their ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠but without the girls, Brodie could never have ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠again. Instead she ends up ââ¬Å"shrive lled and betrayedâ⬠Brodie ââ¬Å"was determined to enter and share the new lifeâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ of the girls and ââ¬Å"warm [herself] on the vitality of the [girls]â⬠when she gets the girls to teach her Greek. She gets them to teach her Greek in order to remain close to the girls. The problem with living vicariously through students is that it leads to the two teachers becoming ââ¬Å"old people who cling to outworn bodiesâ⬠[11]. This leads the authors to show that despite that they probably shouldnââ¬â¢t live vicariously, both Hector and Miss Brodie do live through their students. In Hector this is shown through ââ¬Å"Pillion Dutyâ⬠and that he sees ââ¬Å"the transference of knowledgeâ⬠as ââ¬Å"an erotic actâ⬠. The fact that heââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"an unrepentant molesterâ⬠[12] shows that despite knowing that he knows that it ââ¬Å"doesnââ¬â¢t workâ⬠he continues to ââ¬Å"gropeâ⬠the boys and hope that he can ââ¬Å"warmâ⬠h imself via ââ¬Å"the laying on of handsâ⬠. Mrs Lintott sums up Hector using ââ¬Å"Pillion Dutyâ⬠best, ââ¬Å"that is the most colossal ballsâ⬠; she knows as well as Hector that a teacher cannot live through their students in order to improve their life. While Brodie is with the ââ¬Å"setâ⬠she is almost able to live vicariously through her girls, however, after sheââ¬â¢s fired she becomes ââ¬Å"shrivelled and betrayedâ⬠clearly no longer ââ¬Å"in [her] primeâ⬠. When teaching ââ¬Å"she seizes upon docile little girlsâ⬠[13] and she takes on their ââ¬Å"vitalityâ⬠if her girls can be ââ¬Å"the crà ¨me de la crà ¨meâ⬠then maybe she can be too. But as soon as the connection is lost with the girls, she can no longer look upon people and ââ¬Å"flatten their scorn beneath her chariot wheelsâ⬠. Both teachers are shown to be ââ¬Å"charlatans who exploitâ⬠[14] those who they should be protecting. This vicarious living wou ld make the children feel at one with their teachers without even knowing that they are being exploited. Both Spark and Bennett show that influence is often in the minds of those being influenced- whether that be a pupil or a teacher. They also show the dangers of influenced. If the person influencing is damaged, then they can only go on to inspire more damaged individuals such as Posner. Influence, in the end, is dangerous, whether it lives or it dies and itââ¬â¢s something that nobody can choose. [1] Playing with Time/ James Middleton/ December 2009 [2] Autocracy and Education in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie/ Melodie Monahan/ 2006 [3]Autocracy and Education in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie/ Melodie Monahan/ 2006 [4]Romantic Idealism as a Response to the Rise of Fascism in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie/ David Kelly/ 2006 [5] Splendid by Destructive Egotism/ Martin Price/ January 21, 1962 [6] Autocracy and Education in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie/ Melodie Monahan/ 2006 [7] Playing with Time/ James Middleton/ December 2009 [8] Class Warfare: Why the villain of The History Boys is the better teacher/ David Greenberg/ November 2006 [9] Class Warfare: Why the villain of The History Boys is the better teacher/ David Greenberg/ November 2006 [10] Interview with Alan Bennett/ Theatre Talk/ 2006 [11] Splendid by Destructive Egotism/ Martin Price/ January 21, 1962 [12] Class Warfare: Why the villain of The History Boys is the better teacher/ David Greenberg/ November 2006 [13] Splend id by Destructive Egotism/ Martin Price/ January 21, 1962 [14] Splendid by Destructive Egotism/ Martin Price/ January 21, 1962
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