AQA History A-Level
2N Revolution and Dictatorship: Russia, 1917-1953
A*/Level 5 Essay
Question: The Provisional Government was Responsible for its Own Downfall. Assess the validity of this view.
Key Points Include:
Lenin’s Leadership & Timing.
Trotsky’s tactical planning & military support.
Continued strains on the homefront as a result of the ongoing war.
The critical mistakes of Kerensky - esp. within the Kornilov affair.
Level 5/A* Exam Response.
English Literature (AQA)
Love Through the Ages
Comparative Essay comparing Brontë’s Jane Eyre with Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
Question: ‘Lovers are driven primarily by a desire to escape the past’.
By comparing two prose texts, explore the extent to which you agree with this statement.
This essay has also been colour-coded so that you can easily note where the different Assessment Objectives (AOs) have been hit.
French A-Level (AQA)
Paper 2: Writing
Section B: Films
Jean-Pierre Jeunet: Un long Dimanche de fiançailles
Question: « Un long Dimanche de fiançailles suscite plus de sympathie pour Mathilde que pour Tina. » Dans quelle mesure êtes-vous d’accord avec ce jugement ?
A* Exam Response.
This essay examines the hardships faced by both Mathilde Donnay and Tina Lombardi in Jeunet’s 2004 film & analyses the sympathy which the events of the film elicit for both characters. It ultimately argues that the film elicits greater sympathy for Tina than it does for the central protagonist and narrator, Mathilde.
Word Count: 1040
This essay explores the theme of uncertainty in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
Question: Explore how Shakespeare presents uncertainty in Hamlet. You must relate your discussion to relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
Word Count: 2134
This essay explores both the initial uncertainty that plagues Hamlet while he seeks proof of his uncle’s crime as well as Hamlet’s uncertainty of self. Indeed, Hamlet’s ‘need to know’ proves ironic as, even when the uncertainty surrounding the guilt of Claudius is removed, Hamlet’s fatal flaw of procrastination endures.
All quotations used from this play, as well as all critical quotations, are footnoted in the essay for ease of reference. (Page references refer to the Wordsworth Classics edition).
This essay will be useful for any student studying Hamlet as part of their KS5 curriculum.