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GCE English Literature

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Title: GCE English Literature


1
GCE English Literature
  • Support Events
  • March 4 5

2
Agenda
  • 12.15pm Registration Lunch
  • 1.15pm Introduction Majella Corrigan
  • 1.20pm The requirements of the revised
    specification
  • Chief Examiner Professor Elmer
    Kennedy-Andrews
  • AS2 - Section B Prose -
  • Using an Agenda for Study The Great Gatsby
  • 2.00pm AS2 - Section A Poetry -
  • Review of specimen questions mark schemes
  • How to answer an AS2 poetry question
    exemplar questions for group discussion/response
    .
  • - Heaney/Montague
  • - Thomas/Frost

3
Our support in print and online
  • Specification Sept 2007
  • Specimen papers and mark schemes Sept 2007
  • Exemplification of standards
  • AS September November 2009
  • A2 September November 2010
  • Chief Examiners reports with top tips for
    improving examination performance

4
Our support online
  • Student Guides Sept 2007
  • Agendas for Study April 2008
  • Student podcasts with top tips on how to prepare
    for the examination
  • Jan 2008
  • Top team podcasts with top tips on improving
    examination performance February 2008

5
Ongoing support
  • Internal assessment framework and guidance online
    April 2008
  • Internal assessment will ensure rigour yet be
    flexible, (not just a GCSE write on) should be
    obvious that two plays have been studied
  • Titles will be suggested which show the
    parameters within which you can work, and which
    target differing abilities
  • Microsite available for teacher forum
  • Candidate record sheet to include section for
    student commentary How did they get there?
  • Title workshops/Agreement trials Sept 2008

6
  • Use of an Agenda for Study
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • The Great Gatsby

7
The Great Gatsby
  • In this Unit, there are 3 Assessment Objectives
    involved - AO1, AO3 and AO4.
  • AO1 Communication
  • In the examination, the candidate should be able
    to show good knowledge and understanding of the
    novel, and to write about it in an informed and
    relevant way, using appropriate terminology and
    concepts, and coherent, accurate written
    expression.

8
The Great Gatsby AO3
  • AO3 Response to other readers opinion
  • In the examination, the candidate should
  • offer opinion or judgment in response to the
    given reading of the text
  • take account of key terms as the basis of the
    argument
  • make an attempt at reasoning in support of
    his/her opinion
  • provide textual referencing not generalisation
    - to illustrate her/his opinion

9
The Great Gatsby AO3
  • It is not essential for candidates in the
    examination to refer to the opinions of other
    critics and commentators even to obtain full
    marks. AO 3 can be satisfied by the candidates
    developing her/his reading in response to the
    given reading. If, however, critics are used,
    they must be
  • used with understanding
  • incorporated into the argument to reinforce or be
    seen as an alternative to the candidates opinion
  • not used as a substitute for the development of
    the candidates own opinion
  • properly acknowledged.

10
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • Candidates use of contextual material will
    depend on the focus of the stimulus
    statement/given reading.
  • Candidates should note that
  • questions may appear to be answerable from the
    text alone but that is not enough to satisfy
    AO4 candidates must go outside the novel
  • the given reading in examination questions will
    always focus on a particular contextual aspect
    e.g. historical, social, political, biographical,
    or literary
  • Examples of contextual areas on which questions
    may be based are ...

11
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • Biographical
  • Links between Fitzgerald and Gatsby e.g.
  • Fitzgeralds idealism mirrored in Gatsbys
  • Fitzgeralds consciousness of poverty and sense
    of social inferiority projected into
    characterisation of Gatsby
  • Fitzgeralds disappointment in love with Ginevra
    King and Zelda Sayre reflected in Gatsbys desire
    for Daisy
  • Fitzgeralds experience of the army (1917-1919)
    repeated in Gatsbys life as a soldier
  • Fitzgeralds hedonistic lifestyle mirrored in
    Gatsbys extravagance.

12
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • Links between Fitzgerald and Nick Carraway e.g.
  • both Mid-Westerners,
  • both from ordinary middle class backgrounds with
    little money,
  • both aware of ruthlessness and carelessness of
    the wealthy classes,
  • both capable of recognising the dangers of
    idealism

13
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • Social
  • The Jazz Age the Roaring Twenties the age of
    jazz, parties, the motor car, advertising
  • Prohibition Act (1920) criminal underworld
  • Post-war disillusionment Gertrude Steins lost
    generation
  • The Boom (increasing affluence) before the Bust
    (the Great Depression following the Wall Street
    Crash in 1929) which paralleled the course of
    Fitzgeralds own life
  • The divided society gap between rich and poor
    the valley of ashes

14
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • The American Dream the promise of America new
    beginnings, fresh new starts social mobility
    opportunity for people to realise their dreams of
    freedom, happiness and success disappointment in
    the Dream increasing materialism in a spiritual
    wasteland
  • A callous, careless society underlying despair
    sense of sterility
  • Contrast between (small-town) Mid-Western values
    and those of East Egg
  • Differences between values and expectations of
    Fitzgeralds contemporary readership and those of
    todays reader

15
The Great Gatsby - AO4 Context
  • Literary
  • The novel of manners the novel as a
    representation of the typical styles and mores of
    the time
  • Social satire targets of Fitzgeralds social
    criticism materialism, spiritual emptiness,
    unchecked idealism, the lack of any ideals, moral
    failure
  • The Romance tendency of the novel towards
    symbolism, allegory, dream, imaginative excess
    concern with spiritual states rather than with
    ordinary events
  • The concept of the hero is Gatsby a hero?

16
The Great Gatsby - Examples of Themes on which
questions may be set
  • Fitzgerald and the American Dream Fitzgeralds
    ambivalent view of the dream
  • Difference between the world that Fitzgerald
    presents and that of todays readers
  • The novel as the story of America the Mythic
    Novel use of coda and other devices to enlarge
    and generalise the Gatsby story
  • The symbolic novel - symbolic settings West Egg,
    East Egg, the valley of ashes, the Midwest, the
    Plaza Suite, the fresh green breast of the New
    World key images and motifs e.g. cars, nature
    (flowers, nightingale, moonlight, golden sun),
    symbolic colour schemes, eyes/seeing, clocks, the
    sea

17
The Great Gatsby - Examples of Themes on which
questions may be set
  • The modernist novel unreliable narrator
    episodic, non-chronological narration coda
    symbolism themes of disillusionment,
    uncertainty, failure
  • Representation of women in America in the 1920s -
    Emancipated women new social and sexual freedom
    e.g. Daisy, Jordan, Myrtle
  • The idea of the hero the nature of Gatsbys
    dream is he a hero? Nicks ambivalent view
    of Gatsby
  • The Novel of Social Criticism targets of
    Fitzgeralds social criticism
  • Aspects of America represented by Tom Buchanan,
    George Wilson et.al.

18
The Great Gatsby
  • Web Resources
  • www.homework-online.com/tgg/index.asp
  • Includes Chapter summaries, character analyses,
    thematic discussion, symbolism, Important Quotes,
    Users Forum
  • http//sparknotes.com/lit/gatsby
  • Includes plot overview, character studies,
    Themes, Motifs and Symbols, Study Questions,
    Further Reading
  • www.sc.edu/fitzgerald/index.html
  • University of South Carolina F. Scott Fitzgerald
    Centenary Site
  • http//www.areasearchguide.com/gatsby.html
  • Includes analysis, reviews, general resources,
    study guides, lesson plans, links

19
The Great Gatsby
  • Bibliography
  • Andrew J. Bruccoli (ed) New Essays on The Great
    Gatsby. New York Cambridge University Press,
    1985
  • Kathleen Parkinson, The Great Gatsby, Penguin
    Critical Guides, 1988
  • Andrew Turnbull, Scott Fitzgerald, The Bodley
    head, 1962.
  • Robert H. Fossum and John K. Roth, The American
    Dream, British Association for American Studies,
    1982

20
Heaney/Montague
  • HEANEY OPENED GROUND
  • MONTAGUE NEW SELECTED POEMS
  • AO3 Comparing and contrasting
  • Choosing appropriate poems to answer the question
    set.

21
Heaney/Montague
  • Examples of themes on which questions may be set,
    and suggestions of poems relating to these themes
  • Childhood
  • Heaney The Barn, Man and Boy
  • Montague Like Dolmens Round my Childhood, The
    Water Carrier, The Locket, Time in Armagh
  • The Past
  • Heaney Bogland, The Settle Bed
  • Montague A Lost Tradition, Cassandras
    Answer, The Errigal Road
  • Rural life
  • Heaney The Barn, The Forge, Bogland, The
    Wifes Tale, Man and Boy
  • Montague Like Dolmens, The Wild Dog Rose,
    The Silver Flask, Forge

22
Heaney/Montague
  • Love
  • Heaney The Skunk
  • Montague All Legendary Obstacles
  • Poems about Women
  • Heaney The Wifes Tale, The Skunk, A Drink
    of Water
  • Montague Cassandras Answer, Like Dolmens,
    The Wild Dog Rose
  • Divided society/inheritance
  • Heaney The Other Side, The Strand at Lough
    Beg, The Ministry of Fear
  • Montague A Lost Tradition, A Grafted Tongue,
    The Errigal Road

23
Heaney/Montague
  • Authority
  • Heaney The Ministry of Fear
  • Montague Time in Armagh
  • Death
  • Heaney The Strand at Lough Beg, Man and Boy
  • Montague The Locket,
  • Poetry
  • Heaney The Forge, Exposure
  • Montague The Water Carrier, Like Dolmens

24
Heaney/Montague
  • Exemplar question
  • Montague and Heaney both write about the Irish
    past.
  • Compare and contrast the two poets treatment of
    the Irish past in two poems you have studied.
  • POEMS SELECTED Bogland (Heaney) and A Lost
    Tradition (Montague)

25
Heaney/Montague
  • Comparing and contrasting thematic development
  • Bogland uncovering of Irelands past in terms
    of delving down through layers of bog
  • A Lost Tradition the neglect of a past
    culture despite continuing physical and
    linguistic reminders
  • - Both poems view landscape as repository of the
    past, of racial or tribal inheritance
  • - Heaneys bogland more generalised than
    Montagues Clogher Valley
  • - Both poems concede impossibility of recovering
    a pure source

26
Heaney/Montague
  • AO2 Structure, form and language (Methods)
  • Comparing and contrasting the two poets
    treatment of theme
  • Form and structure of Bogland
  • - central image of the bog as symbol of passing
    time (see Heaneys comments on significance of
    the bog to him in the Mossbawn and Feeling
    into Words sections of Preoccupations)
  • - series of images to suggest the ancient bogland
    heritage

27
Heaney/Montague
  • Form and structure of A Lost Tradition
  • mingling of reflections on the past with
    personal experience
  • adaptation of old Gaelic tribal lament see
    account of the defeat of the ONeills in final
    stanzas

28
Heaney/Montague
  • Language (including imagery) and tone in
    Bogland
  • - Implied contrast between Irish depth and
    American expansiveness (see Theodore Roethkes
    poem In Praise of Prairies)
  • - Use of we poet speaking on behalf of the
    Irish
  • - Sensuous imagery evoking textures of bogland
    e.g. melting and opening under foot, the ground
    as kind, black butter
  • - Use of short-lined artesian stanza structure
    an augur going down into the ground, history,
    culture, consciousness

29
Heaney/Montague
  • Language (including imagery) and tone in A Lost
    Tradition
  • - Glorifying of place names (relate to Irish
    dinnseanchas tradition) uncultivated pearls,
    image-encrusted name
  • - Use of names of heroes of Ireland Barnagh,
    ONiall, OHagan
  • - Use of broken Irish language
  • - Images of decay, fading, ghostliness, defeat
    rusty litany, ghostly tread, dying sun,
    founder in a Munster bog
  • - Elegiac tone traditional Irish formula So
    breaks the heart, Brish-mo-Cree lament for the
    decline of the ONeills and the old Gaelic order

30
Heaney/Montague
  • Montagues poem more specific in its Irish
    references
  • Deeper implications in Heaneys poem the space
    which opens up in his last line (the O)
    suggests infinite time stretching back into the
    past, the infinite possibilities for poetry, the
    notion that origins are unreachable.
  • - Heaneys poem more static and emblematic than
    Montagues travelogue.

31
Thomas/Frost
  • THOMAS Selected Poems
  • FROST Selected Poems
  • The examination question primarily requires
    candidates to compare and contrast (AO3) the
    poetic methods employed by the selected pair of
    poets in two poems which are thematically and/or
    stylistically related.
  • Candidates are therefore expected to articulate
    informed and relevant responses (AO1)
  • that analyse the poetic methods such as form,
    structure, language and tone which these poets
    employ to achieve particular poetic effects
    (AO2).

32
Thomas/Frost
  • Edward Thomas Methods (AO2)
  • Form and Structure variation on the lyric, the
    occasional use of narrative use of conventional
    forms eg couplets the structural movement
    towards personal introspection.
  • Language His concern to the last was what it
    had always been, to touch earthly things and to
    come as near to them in words as words would
    come(Frost on Thomas) - adjectival sparseness
    use of language to encapsulate the spirit and
    psyche of traditional England e.g. country folk,
    flora rejection of late-Victorian poeticism in
    favour of a more spare diction to evoke place
    language conveys an awareness of Modernist
    bleakness, but his sensibilities are not
    ultimately nihilistic influence of colloquial
    speech on verse conversations with country
    people and dialogue with the self.
  • Tone contemplative, reflective, introspective,
    melancholy, wistful, capacity for delight.

33
Thomas/Frost
  • Robert Frost Methods (AO2)
  • Form and Structure comparison of free verse to
    playing tennis with the net down sonnet
    heroic couplet, blank verse, dramatic monologue,
    dialogue, eclogue movement from delight to
    wisdom development of metaphors.
  • Language the sound of sense use of deceptive
    yet meaningful diction skilful use of
    traditional devices such as rhyme and metre
    synthesis of traditional conventions with the
    cadence of idiomatic, vernacular speech
    aphoristic and epigrammatic expression tension
    between traditionalism/Romantic influence of
    earlier works and more Modernist bleakness of
    particular later poems.
  • Tone ironic, sceptical, detached, contemplative,
    reflective, philosophical.

34
Thomas/Frost
  • Towards a consideration of comparable themes
  • Acute perceptions of the natural world and
    natural phenomena as a means towards more
    abstract, universalised knowledge and wisdom.
  • Epiphanic moments of delight at the aesthetic and
    sensual qualities of the natural world in tension
    with an intuitive, implicit recognition of
    darkness and fragility.
  • Doubt, uncertainty and alienation.
  • Human limitations and isolation in social and
    natural environments.
  • The quest to understand the self and the
    essential nature of existence.
  • Human endeavour and work.
  • Human relationships and communication.
  • The relationship between rural place and the
    psyche of the individual or group.

35
Thomas/Frost
  • Contemplation For Once, then Something Tuft
    of Flowers The Glory Beauty
  • Rural work Out, Out Apple-Picking
    Haymaking
  • Harshness of Life Out, Out The Owl
  • Trees Aspens Birches Tree at My Window
  • Birds The Owl The Oven-bird
  • Old men Man and Dog An Old Mans Winter
    Night

36
Thomas/Frost
  • The natural world / man and nature / beauty of
    the natural world too many to list
  • Place Adlestrop The Chalk Pit Stopping by
    Woods on a Snowy Evening The Wood-Pile
  • People The New Year The Gypsy May 23
    An Old Mans Winter Night
  • Encounters The New year As The Teams
    Headbrass The Chalk Pit Two look at Two
    Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening

37
Exemplar questions
  • Q.1 Both Heaney and Montague write about
    encounters between Protestant and Catholic. (The
    Other Side The Errigal Road)
  • Q.2 Both Frost and Thomas write about
    encounters between rural people.
  • (Mending Wall As the Team's Head-Brass)

38
COMPARING AND CONTRASTING HEANEYS THE OTHER
SIDE AND MONTAGUES THE ERRIGAL ROAD
  • Similarity of basic situation encounter and
    conversation between two representative
    individuals in a context of natural landscape and
    colonial history.
  • Heaney maintains focus on the two individuals to
    the end, but Montague shifts focus at the end of
    his poem away from the relationship between the
    two men to express concern about a possible
    future in which modern development will
    obliterate the historic landscape.
  • Montagues perspective is wider than Heaneys
    Heaney concentrates mostly on the Protestant
    neighbour and his attention doesnt wander beyond
    the neighbouring farms in Montague there is less
    of a close-up on either of the human forms, less
    characterisation, and more interest in the wider
    landscape, the local place-names and townlands,
    the events of the past, present and future.

39
COMPARING AND CONTRASTING HEANEYS THE OTHER
SIDE AND MONTAGUES THE ERRIGAL ROAD
  • Heaney puts more emphasis on division and
    difference (in speech, farmland, religion)
    Montague speaks of shared landscape.
  • The relationship in Heaney is more strained and
    hesitant but Montagues sharing is also
    guarded and qualified (but does not ask me in)
    both poets enforce traditional binary oppositions
    between Protestant and Catholic, Planter and
    Gael.
  • Both use tercets, but more rhyming in Montague.

40
COMPARING AND CONTRASTING FROSTS MENDING WALL
AND THOMASS AS THE TEAMS HEAD-BRASS
  • Basic similarity of situation encounter between
    two countrymen while at work in a rural
    environment.
  • Difference of thematic focus Ts is centrally a
    war poem, Fs a meditation on the nature and
    function of boundaries.
  • Fs is a compact parable poem developed around a
    central symbol, Ts poem is a response to a
    specific historical situation, though opening
    onto larger considerations of the way life
    continues in the face of destruction and death.
  • Both employ a loose, vernacular idiom both have
    a dramatic quality one is a monologue, the other
    a dialogue both are composed out of the
    interplay of loose, associative conversational
    rhythms and the strict iambic pentameter line.

41
COMPARING AND CONTRASTING FROSTS MENDING WALL
AND THOMASS AS THE TEAMS HEAD-BRASS
  • Focus of Fs poem remains fixed on the immediate
    situation and characters T s poem moves between
    the immediate scene in the English countryside
    and the war in France.
  • F is more interested in characterisation than T
    F develops a contrast between the two farmers and
    presents an in-depth portrait of the speaker Ts
    two men are less strongly differentiated or
    defined.
  • Both poems have open endings T does not draw any
    explicit moral or conclusion from the encounter
    he has dramatised F sits on the fence, the
    narrators viewpoint not being clearly superior
    to the neighbours (all truth is dialogue, RF).
  • Both poems built on contrasts in T, the contrast
    between the peaceful, timeless English
    countryside and its rural rituals on one hand,
    and, on the other, the violent forces of change
    in both the human and natural worlds (war and
    blizzard) in F, the contrast between the speaker
    and neighbour, between walls-up and
    walls-down points of view.

42
Poetry Anthologies
  • Indicated interest in each anthology?
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