Pop in some tasty morsels of knowledge for AQA GCSE English - from the comfort of your own cosy castle!
Tuesday, 5 June 2018
Monday, 28 May 2018
English Language Paper 1: key info and resources
Hi folks,
I hope you're having a good rest after a manic couple of weeks. Are you ready to get your revision head back on?
I've already created plenty of resources for revising English Language, so I'm going to put them together in this blogpost (Paper 1) and the next (Paper 2).
First of all, here's the structure and suggested timings for Paper 1:
I'll do a similar post on Paper 2 in the next day or two.
Let me know if you need anything.
Mr M
I hope you're having a good rest after a manic couple of weeks. Are you ready to get your revision head back on?
I've already created plenty of resources for revising English Language, so I'm going to put them together in this blogpost (Paper 1) and the next (Paper 2).
First of all, here's the structure and suggested timings for Paper 1:
Your first job is to make sure you know the above information inside out. Know your own battle plan for the timings and remind yourself to highlight key words in the questions as you go. For instance, you might choose a different plan:
- Read and annotate, then do Q1 (10 mins)
- Do Q2 (Language) (12 mins)
- Do Q3 (Structure) (12 mins)
- Do Q4 (Evaluation) (25 mins)
- Do Q5 (Descriptive/narrative writing) (45 minutes)
Tip: I'd consider jotting down a few notes on STRUCTURE as you read:
- What's interesting about the first sentence/paragraph?
- What perspective do we get in each paragraph?
- What shifts take place in the 'journey' of the text?
- Where are the 'key sentences' that give away essential information?
- What patterns can you spot? What ties it together as a coherent whole (e.g. imagery, motif, tone etc.)
- Do internal thoughts contrast with external actions?
- How are characters introduced? Do they contrast with each other?
- What happens at the end? Whay is the final sentence effective? Is there a circular structure? How does the ending contrast with the beginning?
The mock Paper 1 powerpoint we used in class can be found here.
Question-by-question guidance:
These links are to posts from last year - but they're still relevant and accurate:
Q1 - List 4 things (4 marks)
Q2 - Language (8 marks)
Q3 - Structure (8 marks)
Here is a link to AQA's own advice about this question.
Q4 - Evaluation (20 marks)
Q5 - Descriptive/narrative writing (40 marks)
If you liked the DROP, SHIFT, ZOOM method we tried recently, here's an explanation of it. And here's a quick visual recap:
If you search your email inbox for 'DROP SHIFT' you'll find some examples that I sent you back in April.
Don't forget - there are still some useful sets on Quizlet, especially the 100 words vocab list and its partner set, 100 words (sentence completion).
Finally, here is my target list for Paper 1:
Question-by-question guidance:
These links are to posts from last year - but they're still relevant and accurate:
Q1 - List 4 things (4 marks)
Q2 - Language (8 marks)
Q3 - Structure (8 marks)
Here is a link to AQA's own advice about this question.
Q4 - Evaluation (20 marks)
Q5 - Descriptive/narrative writing (40 marks)
If you liked the DROP, SHIFT, ZOOM method we tried recently, here's an explanation of it. And here's a quick visual recap:
If you search your email inbox for 'DROP SHIFT' you'll find some examples that I sent you back in April.
Don't forget - there are still some useful sets on Quizlet, especially the 100 words vocab list and its partner set, 100 words (sentence completion).
Finally, here is my target list for Paper 1:
I'll do a similar post on Paper 2 in the next day or two.
Let me know if you need anything.
Mr M
Thursday, 24 May 2018
AIC and Poetry Revision
Hi all,
Here are some final resources to look through prior to Paper 2:
Priestley's methods and message
Act-by-act quotations for each character in An Inspector Calls
An Inspector Calls - Character Lectures (aiming for top grades):
Here are some final resources to look through prior to Paper 2:
Priestley's methods and message
Act-by-act quotations for each character in An Inspector Calls
An Inspector Calls - Character Lectures (aiming for top grades):
(You can find links for the other characters alongside the above blogposts)
AIC - The Knowledge
AIC Knowledge Organiser
Structuring a response - featuring Mr Birling
AIC on Quizlet
All my AIC blogposts
Context vid:
AIC Knowledge Organiser
Structuring a response - featuring Mr Birling
AIC on Quizlet
All my AIC blogposts
Context vid:
Poetry plan: Romantic Obsession
Poetry Guide Book
Love and Relationships on Quizlet
All my old poetry posts
Let me know if you need anything!
Mr M
Poetry Guide Book
Love and Relationships on Quizlet
All my old poetry posts
Let me know if you need anything!
Mr M
Monday, 21 May 2018
Macbeth: Thoughts on Kingship, Morality... and Trifle!
Hi folks,
In today's lesson, we looked at the idea of 'kingship' (i.e. what makes a good king) but also the idea of what makes a good person. What values are endorsed and celebrated by Shakespeare?
We looked at a couple of extracts:
In today's lesson, we looked at the idea of 'kingship' (i.e. what makes a good king) but also the idea of what makes a good person. What values are endorsed and celebrated by Shakespeare?
We looked at a couple of extracts:
The first is from Act 1 Scene 4, where we see Duncan and Malcolm talking about the old Thane of Cawdor.
The second is from the 'English scene', Act 4 Scene 3, where Malcolm is pretending to be a terrible human being in order to test out Macduff's morality.
A question about kingship might focus on Macbeth's rule as king, but might also get you thinking about how other characters are presented as having 'kingly' qualities.
For more ideas on kingship, see here and here. Or check out this Twitter thread.
For the rest of this post, I want to consider the question of what Shakespeare is saying about what it takes to be a good king and a good person.
What qualities does a good king possess?
At the start of the play, Macbeth is seen as a virtuous, 'valiant', 'brave' and 'noble' leader. Surely this makes him potential king material?
But Macbeth himself recognises in Duncan the virtues that make him a good king: he is 'meek' (i.e. humble and in touch with the common man) and 'clear in his great office'. (1.7) Once he has killed him, he immediately regrets it.
Later, when Malcolm describes himself as full of 'lust' and 'vice', he lists the kingly qualities that he claims to lack:
But I have none: the king-becoming graces,
As justice, verity, temperance, stableness,
Bounty, perseverance, mercy, lowliness,
Devotion, patience, courage, fortitude,
I have no relish of them, but abound
In the division of each several crime,
Acting it many ways. Nay, had I power, I should
Pour the sweet milk of concord into hell,
Uproar the universal peace, confound
All unity on earth.
This list of qualities might make us think of Macbeth's crimes. The words 'temperance' and 'stableness' here also make us think of Macbeth's inferiority complex when it comes to Banquo, who he says has a 'dauntless temper of the mind' and a 'royalty of nature.'
Consider also the imagery of clothes. Macbeth asks the witches: 'why do you dress me in borrowed robes'. He doesn't feel fit to wear that title. This is later echoed by Angus in 5.2: 'Now does he feel his title hand loose about him, like a giant's robe upon a dwarfish thief.' This imagery suggests that Macbeth is not fit to wear these robes.
This links to the idea of the Great Chain of Being and the Divine Right of Kings. By murdering Duncan, Macbeth has challenged God's order - which leads to disorder and chaos in nature.
So, what kind of person makes the right kind of king? Whoever God decides is the answer.
In the end, there is not much difference between the 'kingship' question and the question of what makes an honourable, good person. We noticed this pattern today:
Oftentimes, to win us to our harm,
The instruments of darkness tell us truths,
Win us with honest trifles, to betray's
In deepest consequence. Banquo, 1.3
he died (The Thane of Cawdor)
As one that had been studied in his death
To throw away the dearest thing he owed,
As 'twere a careless trifle. Malcolm, 1.4
...mine eternal jewel
Given to the common enemy of man,
To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings! Macbeth, 3.1
Nought's had, all's spent,
Where our desire is got without content. Lady Macbeth, 3.2
All of these quotes suggest the same thing: power, titles, the crown - they're all 'trifles'. They're not important and not the key to happiness and 'content'.
On the other hand, the soul is a real 'jewel'; it is of 'deepest consequence'.
So, what is Shakespeare saying? Don't value titles, gold, power. Value your soul. Value your virtues and your honour and reputation.
Macbeth had 'golden opinions' and he tried to convince Lady Macbeth that they were as good as a golden crown. The above quotations show that what the Macbeths 'threw away' was far more valuable that what they gained.
A true king is honourable, just, virtuous, generous. A bad king is power-hungry, corrupt, ruthless, and a tyrant.
Simple, eh? Perhaps not. These ideas fit into the 'providential reading' of Macbeth. Many modern critics think that all of the characters are equivocators and all are just as capable of doing what Macbeth did. For instance, is Duncan a fair and righteous king? Or is he another Machiavellian political manipulator who rewards Macbeth with praise while denying him his rightful shot at the crown - giving it to his less deserving son? That's up to you!
This is non-essential, but if you want one last thing to think about, check out these critical views on Macbeth:
Good luck!
Mr M
Sunday, 20 May 2018
Bildungsroman: a recap
Hi,
It's probably the easiest and most useful way of getting into context when writing about Great Expectations. If you get a question about Pip - or a question where Pip is important - then you've got to mention the literary context of bildungsroman.
Here's a reminder of what it is:
It's probably the easiest and most useful way of getting into context when writing about Great Expectations. If you get a question about Pip - or a question where Pip is important - then you've got to mention the literary context of bildungsroman.
Here's a reminder of what it is:
Now think of Pip.
At the start of the novel, the marshes and the forge are all he knows. The symbolic 'horizontal lines' that he sees as the horizon in Chapter 1 represent his limited expectations and his bleak prospects.
When he goes to Satis House, everything changes. His horizons suddenly expand. But he also starts to feel 'coarse and common'. He is no longer content to be a blacksmith. This loss of identity leads his on a quest to improve himself and make himself worthy of Estella.
He makes lots of mistakes along the way. He becomes a bit of a snob, he rejects Joe, he gets into debt; in the the middle chapters, he faces humiliation after humiliation. These are all part and parcel of the learning process of bildungsroman.
In the end, Pip is able to move on from the haunting presence of Miss Havisham and Satis House, and he's forced to let go of any hope of being with Estella. He recognises Joe as a 'gentle Christian man', he recognises that Joe is more worthy of Biddy's hand, and he accepts a job. He accepts his limitations and his place in the world. He learns, from Herbert's example, the virtues of hard work and 'looking about you' for an opportunity - and gets over the idea that some benefactor can make his dreams come true. By the end, he redeems himself - and perhaps he earns the half-chance of happiness with Estella - if that is what Dickens suggests at the end.
Hope this helps,
Mr M
Saturday, 19 May 2018
Miss Havisham: Conclusions and Notes
Hi,
There are plenty of places where you can get a character analysis of Miss Havisham. Try here or here or here or here, for example.
I'm going to give you my interpretations/conclusions to answer the question: what does Miss Havisham represent in Great Expectations?
Here are my final thoughts on Miss Havisham:
1) She's not a realistic character, but a symbol. She is the wicked witch of this dark, inverted fairy tale. She wears one shoe like some kind of twisted Cinderella. But this Cinderella doesn't get her fairytale reversal of fortune. She can be seen as a nightmarish representation of where thwarted expectations and obsessive love can take you. Her situation is an extreme version of Pip's own in many ways. They both lose their fortune to some extent, they are both rejected by the one they love, and they both pine away in a state of stasis instead of moving on with their lives. In terms of bildungsroman, Pip has to learn about the true nature of happiness, love, friendship and what it takes to be a gentle Christian man. He has to do this to avoid Miss Havisham's fate: despair, depression and decay. In the end, he manages it. One he has symbolically 'closed with her' during the fire scene in chapter 49, he is free to move on with his life: accepting Magwitch, accepting his new situation in life, and seeking his own fortune in a similar manner to Herbert. Miss Havisham represents a grotesque, destructive, obsessive and self-loathing part of Pip's psyche which has to be destroyed for him to develop.
2) Miss Havisham can also be seen as a caricatured representation of the status of women in the 19th century (context alert!). She has inherited wealth, land and power - and yet her whole life is defined by her failure to get married. In a society where wealthy women cannot work, where their only aim and ambition is a good marriage (see Jane Austen), Miss Havisham's story shows what can happen in a patriarchal world if a woman's limited choices go wrong.
3) Consider the name:
Unlike Pip and Estella, Miss Havisham's name is rather ambiguous. It might make us think have a shame. Certainly, Miss Havisham's character partly hides herself away out of shame about her failure to marry. This also explains her loathing of her family - the ones who might judge her for her mistakes.
More interestingly though, it might make us think have a sham. A sham is something fake. When Estella first arrives in London, she calls Miss Havisham an 'imposter'. What does she mean by this? Perhaps she means that Miss Havisham is putting on an act? Or that her apparent care and concern for Estella is a pretence? Certainly, she knows that Pip believes her to be his benefactor and, as she admits, she let him 'go on'. Later, she admits that her original intent in adopting Estella was to protect her by stealing her heart away and 'putting ice in its place', but in the end she uses her beauty as a weapon against men. This part of her plan backfires when Estella is made to suffer at the hands of Bentley Drummle.
I hope this helps. I'll try to put together a list of essential quotes tomorrow.
The BBC Bitesize revision notes on Great Expectations can be found here.
The BBC Bitesize revision notes on Macbeth can be found here.
Mr M
There are plenty of places where you can get a character analysis of Miss Havisham. Try here or here or here or here, for example.
I'm going to give you my interpretations/conclusions to answer the question: what does Miss Havisham represent in Great Expectations?
Here are my final thoughts on Miss Havisham:
1) She's not a realistic character, but a symbol. She is the wicked witch of this dark, inverted fairy tale. She wears one shoe like some kind of twisted Cinderella. But this Cinderella doesn't get her fairytale reversal of fortune. She can be seen as a nightmarish representation of where thwarted expectations and obsessive love can take you. Her situation is an extreme version of Pip's own in many ways. They both lose their fortune to some extent, they are both rejected by the one they love, and they both pine away in a state of stasis instead of moving on with their lives. In terms of bildungsroman, Pip has to learn about the true nature of happiness, love, friendship and what it takes to be a gentle Christian man. He has to do this to avoid Miss Havisham's fate: despair, depression and decay. In the end, he manages it. One he has symbolically 'closed with her' during the fire scene in chapter 49, he is free to move on with his life: accepting Magwitch, accepting his new situation in life, and seeking his own fortune in a similar manner to Herbert. Miss Havisham represents a grotesque, destructive, obsessive and self-loathing part of Pip's psyche which has to be destroyed for him to develop.
2) Miss Havisham can also be seen as a caricatured representation of the status of women in the 19th century (context alert!). She has inherited wealth, land and power - and yet her whole life is defined by her failure to get married. In a society where wealthy women cannot work, where their only aim and ambition is a good marriage (see Jane Austen), Miss Havisham's story shows what can happen in a patriarchal world if a woman's limited choices go wrong.
3) Consider the name:
Unlike Pip and Estella, Miss Havisham's name is rather ambiguous. It might make us think have a shame. Certainly, Miss Havisham's character partly hides herself away out of shame about her failure to marry. This also explains her loathing of her family - the ones who might judge her for her mistakes.
More interestingly though, it might make us think have a sham. A sham is something fake. When Estella first arrives in London, she calls Miss Havisham an 'imposter'. What does she mean by this? Perhaps she means that Miss Havisham is putting on an act? Or that her apparent care and concern for Estella is a pretence? Certainly, she knows that Pip believes her to be his benefactor and, as she admits, she let him 'go on'. Later, she admits that her original intent in adopting Estella was to protect her by stealing her heart away and 'putting ice in its place', but in the end she uses her beauty as a weapon against men. This part of her plan backfires when Estella is made to suffer at the hands of Bentley Drummle.
I hope this helps. I'll try to put together a list of essential quotes tomorrow.
The BBC Bitesize revision notes on Great Expectations can be found here.
The BBC Bitesize revision notes on Macbeth can be found here.
Mr M
Macbeth and the theme of TRUTH
Hi again,
There are various themes in Macbeth which I've put under the banner of 'Truth'. They are:
Here's a reminder about the 'providential' reading of the play:
According to this interpretation, the purpose of the play is to teach us about good and evil. We might see Banquo and Macduff as foils for Macbeth in this sense. They are there to show us how to act. They could be said to represent goodness. For example, in 1.3, Banquo's response to the witches is more sceptical, more measured and more careful:
Oftentimes, to win us to our harm, the instruments of darkness tell us truths,
Win us with honest trifles, to betray's
In deepest consequence. (Act 1 Scene 3)
Here, Banquo recognises the power offered by the witches as 'honest trifles', far less important that the 'deepest consequence' of committing a sin and going to hell.
He is, of course, correct. He's describing equivocation - and the witches do turn out to be equivocators. Banquo sees this immediately, but it takes Macbeth much longer.
In Act 3 Scene 1, he considers the possibility of his having given away his soul for nothing:
For Banquo's issue have I filed my mind;
For them, the gracious Duncan have I murdered,
Put rancours in the vessel of my peace,
Only for them, and mine eternal jewel
Given to the common enemy of man,
To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings.
His 'eternal jewel' (his soul) has been given to the 'common enemy' (the devil). Macbeth here accepts this moral truth, which Banquo had the 'wisdom' to realise at the start.
But Macbeth represses this idea, trusting in fate rather than morality:
Rather than so, come Fate into the list, / And champion me to th'utterance.
He chooses to blindly put his trust in the witches. In the end, he sounds foolish when he finally accepts that this was a mistake in Act 5 Scene 5:
I hope this helps. I might knock together a Quizlet set on this theme later. For now, I'm done. Is the Royal Wedding stuff done yet?
Mr M
Somebody asked me about the possibility of a witches question yesterday. Check this out.
There are various themes in Macbeth which I've put under the banner of 'Truth'. They are:
- Truth vs Deception
- Appearance vs Reality
- Equivocation (where the truth is unclear)
- Goodness/Honour/Honesty vs Evil/Dishonour/Lies
Here's a reminder about the 'providential' reading of the play:
According to this interpretation, the purpose of the play is to teach us about good and evil. We might see Banquo and Macduff as foils for Macbeth in this sense. They are there to show us how to act. They could be said to represent goodness. For example, in 1.3, Banquo's response to the witches is more sceptical, more measured and more careful:
Oftentimes, to win us to our harm, the instruments of darkness tell us truths,
Win us with honest trifles, to betray's
In deepest consequence. (Act 1 Scene 3)
Here, Banquo recognises the power offered by the witches as 'honest trifles', far less important that the 'deepest consequence' of committing a sin and going to hell.
He is, of course, correct. He's describing equivocation - and the witches do turn out to be equivocators. Banquo sees this immediately, but it takes Macbeth much longer.
In Act 3 Scene 1, he considers the possibility of his having given away his soul for nothing:
For Banquo's issue have I filed my mind;
For them, the gracious Duncan have I murdered,
Put rancours in the vessel of my peace,
Only for them, and mine eternal jewel
Given to the common enemy of man,
To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings.
His 'eternal jewel' (his soul) has been given to the 'common enemy' (the devil). Macbeth here accepts this moral truth, which Banquo had the 'wisdom' to realise at the start.
But Macbeth represses this idea, trusting in fate rather than morality:
Rather than so, come Fate into the list, / And champion me to th'utterance.
He chooses to blindly put his trust in the witches. In the end, he sounds foolish when he finally accepts that this was a mistake in Act 5 Scene 5:
I pull in resolution and begin
To doubt th' equivocation of the fiend
That lies like truth.
Of course, the modern reading of the play (see above) is more unsettling and nihilistic. It puts forward the idea that everybody equivocates and that Macbeth's crime and eventual death do not change that.
A great discussion on this subject comes in the great scene with Lady Macduff and her son:
Son
Then the liars and swearers are fools,
for there are liars and swearers enough to beat
the honest men and hang up them.
What is a traitor?LADY MACDUFF
Why, one that swears and lies.Son
And be all traitors that do so?LADY MACDUFF
Every one that does so is a traitor, and must be hanged.Son
And must they all be hanged that swear and lie?LADY MACDUFF
Every one.Son
Who must hang them?LADY MACDUFF
Why, the honest men.Son
Then the liars and swearers are fools,
for there are liars and swearers enough to beat
the honest men and hang up them.
Consider the last part of this extract. Here, the innocent son sees liars and equivocators everywhere. Macbeth's crime has not caused Scotland to become sick - it was sick already. Perhaps Macbeth's crime was a result of this moral sickness.
When the murderers arrive moments later, Lady Macduff seems to concur:
I have done no harm. But I remember now
I am in this earthly world; where to do harm
Is often laudable, to do good sometime
Accounted dangerous folly.
I am in this earthly world; where to do harm
Is often laudable, to do good sometime
Accounted dangerous folly.
When, at the end, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are dead, truth doesn't return. Malcolm describes them as 'this dead butcher and his fiend-like queen' which doesn't do justice to the complexity of these characters. This is propaganda designed to legitimise his claim to the throne. Malcolm himself has equivocated and lied during the play. He ends it by offering up earldoms and prizes to those that were loyal to him, just as Macbeth did.
Remember, Macbeth is full of equivocation from beginning to end. As the witches say:
Fair is foul and foul is fair.
It is also full of hallucinations, confusion and unnatural omens. All of these motifs plug into the theme of TRUTH.
There is a lot of good stuff on this theme out there:
- This is a great article on equivocation, including its importance in 1605-6.
- There's more on appearance and reality on the BBC Bitesize site.
- This vid
- Check out all of these APPEARANCE/REALITY quotes! They're everywhere!
I hope this helps. I might knock together a Quizlet set on this theme later. For now, I'm done. Is the Royal Wedding stuff done yet?
Mr M
Somebody asked me about the possibility of a witches question yesterday. Check this out.
Tuesday, 15 May 2018
Monday, 2 April 2018
ClicDickens
Hi folks,
Check out this new concordance of the works of Dickens from the University of Birmingham.
It allows you to search for words in the text so that you can find related quotes and extracts. It looks much better than the one I showed you in class.
Here's just a little of what came up when I searched for 'hands coarse common' (click to enlarge):
This tool could be very useful if you are putting together notes on a theme. For example, if you are revising 'justice', try searching for 'law justice crime guilt court'. In fact, here's what you get if you do just that:
As you can see, you can sort the results in various different ways. You can also see chapter numbers and can browse the examples in the online text.
Give it a whirl.
Mr M
Check out this new concordance of the works of Dickens from the University of Birmingham.
It allows you to search for words in the text so that you can find related quotes and extracts. It looks much better than the one I showed you in class.
Here's just a little of what came up when I searched for 'hands coarse common' (click to enlarge):
This tool could be very useful if you are putting together notes on a theme. For example, if you are revising 'justice', try searching for 'law justice crime guilt court'. In fact, here's what you get if you do just that:
As you can see, you can sort the results in various different ways. You can also see chapter numbers and can browse the examples in the online text.
Give it a whirl.
Mr M
Tuesday, 27 March 2018
English Literature: All the questions so far…
MACBETH:
• how Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth in the play as a whole.
• how Shakespeare presents Macbeth in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents Macbeth in the play as a whole.
• how Shakespeare presents ambition in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents ambition in the play as a whole.
• how Dickens presents Pip’s feelings in this extract
• how Dickens presents the unequal relationship between Pip and Estella in the novel as a whole.
• what Joe says about social class in this extract
• how Dickens presents ideas about social class in the novel as a whole.
• how Dickens presents Pip’s attitude to Magwitch in this extract
• how Dickens presents Pip’s attitudes to Magwitch in the novel as a whole.
• how Sheila responds to her family and to the Inspector
• how Priestley presents Sheila by the ways he writes.
· the ideas about responsibility in An Inspector Calls
· how Priestley presents these ideas by the ways he writes.
· how the different generations respond to events and to each other
· how Priestley presents the different generations in the play.
· how the ending of the play presents some important ideas
· how Priestley presents these ideas by the ways he writes.
• the way Gerald treats women in the play
• how Priestley presents Gerald’s relationships with women.
• what Eva’s life is like in the play
• how Priestley uses Eva to represent the lives of poor people.
• what Mrs Birling says and does in the play
• how Priestley presents her by the ways he writes.
• what society is shown to be like in the play and how it might be improved
• how Priestley presents society through what the Inspector says and does.
Specimen
paper (1)
Starting with this speech (Act 1 Scene 5: The raven himself is hoarse), explain how far you think Shakespeare
presents Lady Macbeth as a powerful woman.
Write about:
• how Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth in the play as a whole.
Specimen
paper (2)
Starting with this speech (Act 5 Scene 3: Bring me no more reports), explain how far you think Shakespeare
presents Macbeth as a hero.
Write about:
• how Shakespeare presents Macbeth in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents Macbeth in the play as a whole.
Specimen
paper (3)
Starting with this moment in the play (Act 1 Scene 7: He hath almost supped), explore how
Shakespeare presents the marriage between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
Write about:
·
how Shakespeare
presents their relationship at this moment in the play
·
how Shakespeare
presents their marriage in the play as a whole.
|
June 2017
Starting with this speech (Act 1 Scene 5: Glamis thou art), explore how Shakespeare presents ambition in
Macbeth.
Write about:
• how Shakespeare presents ambition in this speech
• how Shakespeare presents ambition in the play as a whole.
GREAT
EXPECTATIONS:
Specimen
paper (1)
Starting with this extract (Chapter 8: Dog in disgrace) write about how
Dickens presents the unequal relationship between Pip and Estella.
Write about:
• how Dickens presents Pip’s feelings in this extract
• how Dickens presents the unequal relationship between Pip and Estella in the novel as a whole.
Specimen
paper (2)
Starting with this extract (Chapter 27: Joe’s speech in London), write
about how Dickens presents ideas about social class in Great Expectations.
Write about:
• what Joe says about social class in this extract
• how Dickens presents ideas about social class in the novel as a whole.
Specimen
paper (3)
Starting
with this extract (Chapter 38: Estella and Miss Havisham argue), explore how
far Dickens presents Estella as a cruel character.
Write
about:
·
how Dickens
presents Estella as a cruel character in this extract · how far Dickens presents Estella as cruel in the novel as a whole. |
June 2017
Starting with this extract (Chapter 39: Magwitch returns), explore how
Dickens presents Pip’s attitudes to the convict Magwitch.
Write about:
• how Dickens presents Pip’s attitude to Magwitch in this extract
• how Dickens presents Pip’s attitudes to Magwitch in the novel as a whole.
AN
INSPECTOR CALLS
Specimen
paper (1)
How and why does Sheila change in An Inspector Calls?
Write about:
• how Sheila responds to her family and to the Inspector
• how Priestley presents Sheila by the ways he writes.
OR
How does Priestley explore responsibility in An Inspector Calls?
Write about:
· the ideas about responsibility in An Inspector Calls
· how Priestley presents these ideas by the ways he writes.
Specimen
paper (2)
How does Priestley present some of the differences between the older and
younger generations in An Inspector Calls?
Write about:
· how the different generations respond to events and to each other
· how Priestley presents the different generations in the play.
OR
What do you think is the importance of the ending of An Inspector
Calls?
Write about:
· how the ending of the play presents some important ideas
· how Priestley presents these ideas by the ways he writes.
Specimen
paper (3)
How does Priestley present Gerald’s relationships with women in An
Inspector Calls?
Write about:
• the way Gerald treats women in the play
• how Priestley presents Gerald’s relationships with women.
OR
How does Priestley use Eva Smith to represent poverty in An Inspector
Calls?
Write about:
• what Eva’s life is like in the play
• how Priestley uses Eva to represent the lives of poor people.
June 2017
How far does Priestley present Mrs Birling as an unlikeable character?
Write about:
• what Mrs Birling says and does in the play
• how Priestley presents her by the ways he writes.
OR
How does Priestley use the character of the Inspector to suggest ways
that society could be improved?
Write about:
• what society is shown to be like in the play and how it might be improved
• how Priestley presents society through what the Inspector says and does.
LOVE &
RELATIONSHIPS POETRY
Specimen
paper (1)
Compare how poets present attitudes towards a parent in ‘Follower’ and
in one other poem from ‘Love and relationships’.
Specimen
paper (2)
Compare
how poets present romantic love in ‘Sonnet 29’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
and in one other poem from ‘Love and relationships’.
Specimen
paper (3)
Compare
how poets present strong connections between people in ‘Letters from
Yorkshire’ and in one other poem from ‘Love and Relationships’.
|
June 2017
Compare
how poets present growing up in ‘Mother, any distance’ and in one other
poem from ‘Love and relationships’.
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