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Context MatchUp
Target Level
4-5
Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3
Click on a top box, then click on its match below. Or, drag a top box and drop it onto the correct match. Match all pairs before clicking ‘Check’.
Large numbers of men and women flocked to the factories to find work.
Wages in factories were low, and workers weren't able to save much, if anything.
The marriage of Gerald and Sheila was typical of the times in that it represented a coming together of finances and privilege.
The Birlings, and others like them, would have employed servants to do the domestic chores.
There was no welfare state in 1912, and poor people had to rely on handouts from the wealthy; help which was not always forthcoming.
Edwardian Britain – referring to the reign of Edward VII (1901–1910).
Being unmarried and pregnant was seen as a disgrace.
The stage setting states that the Birlings' dining room should be "substantial and heavily comfortable".
After the Second World War.
The era when the play was set
The era when the play was first performed
Poverty
The wealth of the upper middle class
Position of women
Industrialisation
Social class
Consolidating wealth
Charity