Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Exams have arrived – it’s now or never

How on earth do you prepare for an A Level Eng. Lit exam?

Welcome to the third in a short series about how to revise English successfully.

What does it mean to revise: An author’s methods of presentation?

It is very likely that at least one of the questions you will face in the exam will focus on how an author presents his/her intentions within or across texts. How can you prepare for that?

The key aim of questions like these is to get you to focus not on ‘what happens’ but how the author has crafted the text in order to elicit a particular response in the reader.

There are basic areas to cover, regardless of the text. For each of the following:
  • Try and make condensed notes / a mind map / list headwords
  • Learn a quotation or specific example to illustrate.
Plot
  1. With whom is a reader to identify – a 1st or 3rd person narrator, a particular character?

    a) How has the author achieved that sense of identification?
    b) How does it shape the reader’s perspective on the plot?

  2. If there is a sub-plot

    a) What is its relevance to the main one?
    b) How are the main and sub-plots interwoven?

  3. What is the impact of presenting events chronologically / non-chronologically?

    a) What is the impact of any time frame on the presentation of the plot?
Narrative perspective
  1. Who is telling the story and how close is the reader to him/her?

  2. At what pace do events unfold – how has the author created that effect?

  3. Is there direct authorial comment and/or does tone / irony / mood guide a reader’s response?
Patterning
  1. What themes brought to the fore? (See previous blog in series)

  2. How are imagery and / or symbolism used?

  3. Are there repetitions / echoes of:

    a) Events
    b) Locations
    c) Family structures?
Description
  1. How would you characterise the author’s descriptive techniques?

  2. What kind of language is employed when – to what effect?

  3. How do these techniques create:

    a) Character (see previous blog in series)
    b) Location and atmosphere
    c) Drama, tension / suspense?
As you cover these ideas you always need to keep in mind the intentions of the author – and remember to tell the examiner what they are!

GOOD LUCK

2 comments:

  1. the exam was hard

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sorry to hear that, but hopefully, with the help you got from Crossref-it.info, it will prove to go well for you!

    ReplyDelete

Headlines