JAMB - Literature In English (2025 - No. 38)

From the novel; Look Back in Anger
From the novel; Look Back in Anger
From the novel; Look Back in Anger

This question is based on John Osborne's Look Back in Anger

Bullying in the play is revenge tactics on

rejection
social class
assault
acceptance

Explanation

In John Osborne’s play "Look Back in Anger," the protagonist Jimmy Porter’s relentless bullying of his wife, Alison, is a clear example of social class being used as a motivation for revenge tactics.

The play is a cornerstone of "kitchen sink drama" because it focuses on the frustrations of the "Angry Young Man" in post-war Britain. Jimmy’s bullying serves as a weapon in a larger class war:

  • Disparity in Backgrounds: Jimmy comes from a working-class background, while Alison belongs to the upper-middle class. He sees her and her family (especially her father, Colonel Redfern) as symbols of the "complacency" and "insensitive" world that he despises.

  • Targeting the Symbol: Jimmy does not just bully Alison for her personal flaws; he treats her as a representative of her class. By insulting her, he is taking revenge on a social system that he feels has educated him but left him without a meaningful place in society.

  • Provoking a Reaction: He frequently mocks her "pusillanimous" (cowardly) nature and her inability to feel as deeply as he does, which he attributes to her privileged upbringing. His aggression is an attempt to "wake her up" and force her to experience the suffering he associates with the working class.

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