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Resources are meticulously crafted to align with the UK's educational standards. You can trust that they are created with your students' needs in mind. 🎓 🔎 Explore the collection and discover engaging worksheets, interactive presentations, and creative activity packs that will captivate your students' imaginations while supporting their learning journey. 🌈🔬

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Resources are meticulously crafted to align with the UK's educational standards. You can trust that they are created with your students' needs in mind. 🎓 🔎 Explore the collection and discover engaging worksheets, interactive presentations, and creative activity packs that will captivate your students' imaginations while supporting their learning journey. 🌈🔬
Inspector Calls Sheila Exam Question Exemplar Response
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Inspector Calls Sheila Exam Question Exemplar Response

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Inspector Calls Sheila Exam question exemplar response - PDF download Ideal for students to critic for revision Includes extract from Inspector Calls Question - Write about Sheila Birling and how she is presented at different points in the play. In your response you should: refer to the extract and the play as a whole. show your understanding of characters and events in the play.
Descriptive Writing Peer Reviews/Examples/Worksheets
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Descriptive Writing Peer Reviews/Examples/Worksheets

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Resource 1 - Word Document Download - Student Exemplar for descriptive writing - Graveyard - Ideal for students to critic Resource 2 - PDF Download - Worksheet: Peer Assessing Descriptive Writing Instructions: In this worksheet, you will practice peer assessing descriptive writing. Follow the instructions for each activity carefully, and use the provided questions to guide your assessment. Remember to provide constructive feedback to your peers. Read the reflection questions at the end to think about your own learning and growth. Materials Needed: • Pen or pencil • Descriptive writing samples from your classmates/examples provided Resource 3 - PDF Download - A DESCRIPTION OF BEAUTIFUL SCENERY Handlout contains adjectives, focusing on the 5 senses and similes and metaphors
Macbeth  Context
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Macbeth Context

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This teaching resource is a comprehensive and informative presentation focusing on the context of Shakespeare’s renowned play, Macbeth. It is designed to enhance students’ understanding of the historical and social background surrounding the play, making it an invaluable tool for both teachers and students alike. The resource covers a wide range of topics such as the significance of the Gunpowder Plot, the influence of the Globe Theatre on Shakespearean performances, the political tensions of the era, and the impact of King James I on the portrayal of witches in the play. Moreover, it delves into the themes of divine right of kings, the elements of a tragedy, the juxtaposition of good versus evil, and the complexities of Macbeth as a tragic hero. In addition to exploring external and internal conflicts within the play, the resource examines the role of catharsis and the supernatural elements present in Macbeth. It also touches upon the lack of poetic justice and the function of comic relief, as well as the historical context of the Norse invasion and the prevalent beliefs in witchcraft during King James I’s reign. This presentation is ideal for revision purposes, as it consolidates key information in an engaging and accessible format. It can also be utilised effectively for cover lessons, providing a structured and stimulating lesson for students in the absence of their regular teacher. To ensure the integrity of the content, this teaching resource is available in PDF format, making it non-editable and preserving the quality of the material provided. Download now to enhance your students’ learning experience and facilitate in-depth discussions on the complexities of Macbeth and its historical context.
Literary Devices Lesson Presentation
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Literary Devices Lesson Presentation

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PDF Powerpoint on Literary Devices and Structural features with definitions and examples Covers the following: Similes Metaphors Pathetic Fallacy Oxymoron Alliteration Juxaposition Repetition Onomatopoeia Puns Dramatic Irony Personification Foreshadowing Theme Symbolism Plot Aside Soliloquy Imagery Verbal Irony Hyperbole Paradox Allusion Foil Caesura Enjambment Euphemism
David Lodge Nice Work Essay Exemplar
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David Lodge Nice Work Essay Exemplar

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David Lodge Nice Work Essay Exemplar PDF Download ‘If a literary text does something to its readers, it also simultaneously reveals something about them.’ – Wolfgang Iser Discuss the relationship between a text and its reader(s) in ONE of the literary texts you have studied over the course of the module. You should reference at least TWO of the critical texts to make your arguments.
What is Myth Today?
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What is Myth Today?

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PDF Download What does Barthes mean by ‘myth is a type of speech’? In what ways is myth political (or depoliticized)? How does myth relate to history and nature? What is the function of modern myth?
William Shakespeare
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William Shakespeare

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Contains PDF Lesson Presentation Presentation Notes Student workbook In Unit 1 Lesson 1 we will be looking closely at • Who is William Shakespeare? • Shakespeare’s Life • Facts and Rumours • The Globe Theatre
New Criticism - Literary Analysis Presentation
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New Criticism - Literary Analysis Presentation

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PDF Download - Lesson Overview New Criticism Flashforward to T. S. Eliot Flashback to I. A. Richards (and the Russian Formalists) Against Paraphrase Total Meaning Irony Democracy, Reality, Ambiguity Walt Whitman, Song of Myself (1892) Close Reading Agrarianism and New Criticism The Cultural Politics of the New Criticism New Criticism: Literary Modernism and Social Change John Crowe Ransom vs. Shakespeare Rereading Shakespeare’s Sonnets Sonnet XXXIII After the New Criticism
(Im)Practical Criticism
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(Im)Practical Criticism

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(Im)Practical Criticism - lesson PDF Download I A Richards, 1893-1979 I A Richards’ Hieroglyph Visual Sensations Tied Images Free Imagery Impulses and References Emotions and Attitudes The Neurology of Literary Criticism Practical Criticism: Poem VIII Close Reading: Stanza 1 Close Reading: Stanza 2 Close Reading: Stanza 3 Close Reading: Poem VIII Close Reading: Rhyme Scheme Impractical Criticism?
Less of a Lecture and More of an Entangling
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Less of a Lecture and More of an Entangling

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Less of a Lecture and More of an Entangling - Lesson/Lecture Overview The Lecturee The Mock Student The Implied Student The Ideal Student The Real Student How do literary texts represent readers? Learning Communities Reader-Response vs Formalism How does reader-response differ from formalism? Reading Paradise Lost How Big is Satan’s Spear? Surprized by Sin Why Read Paradise Lost? How does Milton represent the reader in Paradise Lost? The Failing Critic in The Figure in the Carpet The Implied Reader in The Figure in the Carpet Towards the Death of the Author How does James represent the reader / critic in The Figure in the Carpet?
Once Upon a Time: Eight Stories about Narrative
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Once Upon a Time: Eight Stories about Narrative

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Once Upon a Time: Eight Stories about Narrative PDF Download - Lesson Overview Pat Hutchin’s Rosie’s Walk The Ontogeny of Narrative Five Propositions Homer, The Odyssey (transl. Robert Fagles) The Oral Tradition Mimesis The Brothers Grimm, ‘The Frog King, or Iron Henry’ Folk and Fairy Tales and Formalism Against Formalism’s Dual Approach The Coen Brothers, The Big Lebowski Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist Plot, Story and Narrative James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man Modernism John Barth, ‘Life-Story’ Metafiction The Postmodern Condition Graham Gibbs, ‘Twenty Terrible Reasons for Lecturing’
The Apathetic Fallacy
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The Apathetic Fallacy

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PDF Download - The Apathetic Fallacy - Lesson Overview W. K. Wimsatt and Monroe Beardsley: Select Bibliographies Part One: The Affective Fallacy Against Affective Criticism Distinctions between Affective Critics Hamlet and His Problems: The Objective Correlative Poetry, Emotions, Objects The Fallacy of the Affective Fallacy Part Two: The Intentional Fallacy The Way of the World Wimsatt and Beardsley’s Axioms Intentionality and Romanticism Eliot’s Intentions in ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ Part Three: The Apathetic Fallacy
The Death of the Author
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The Death of the Author

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PDF Download - Lesson Overview What do you understand by the term ‘author’? What do you understand by the term ‘work’? The Author Function What idea do you have of what an ‘author’ is or does? Barthes’s ‘The Death of the Author’ Barthes and language Our ideas of ‘author’ and ‘reader’ are historically and culturally determined, and are subject to change. Language is a system of signs used to produce a facsimile, or simulacrum, of the real world either in speech or writing. Language, and the meanings associated with words, are all recycled by writers. There is, therefore, no ‘author’, or single ‘authority’ in a text. Instead, there is Foucault’s ‘author function’, an idea or process which is socially constructed and which transforms (by ‘superstition’ for Barthes or ‘magic’ for Foucault’) a person into an Author: it is a role or an idea, not a person.
F. Raymond Leavis Lesson Presentation
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F. Raymond Leavis Lesson Presentation

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The Love Song of F. Raymond Leavis PDF Download - Lesson Overview F R Leavis vs Mass Civilization Culture vs Civilization Leavis, Minority Culture, and Literary Criticism Leavis, Teaching, and Collaboration Collaboration vs Discipleship Leavis and the Great Tradition T. S. Eliot and Tradition The Mind of the Poet and the Shred of Platinum Tradition and T. S. Eliot T. S. Eliot on Civilization and Culture…… and Savagery Leavis vs Eliot Eliot’s England: East Coker Leavis vs Eliot’s England Leavis’s England Literary Englands
David Lodge Nice Work
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David Lodge Nice Work

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PDF Download - Lesson Overview David Lodge, 1935 - : A Select Bibliography Language of Fiction: Close Reading Poetry and Prose Language of Fiction: Translation and Bad Writing Language of Fiction: These Words in This Order Language of Fiction: Particularity Nice Work: ‘Semi-what?’ ‘Semiotics. The Study of Signs’
The Rise and Fall of the Reading Public
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The Rise and Fall of the Reading Public

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PDF Download Lesson - The Rise and Fall of the Reading Public Overview Q. D. Leavis, 1906-1981: A Select Bibliography What is a Bestseller? Q D Leavis and the Bestseller Leavis and the Reading Public Leavis vs the Bestseller The Leavises and the Eighteenth Century Leavis and the Eighteenth-Century Bestseller The Growth of the Reading Public Jane Austen (1775-1817), A Select Bibliography Leavis: from Eliza Haywood to Jane Austen Jane Austen’s ‘Love and Freindship’ The Disintegration of the Reading Public
Ecocriticism vs Postmodernism
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Ecocriticism vs Postmodernism

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PDF Download Overview Ecocriticism vs Postmodernism What is ecocriticism? Postmodern Ecology: Deep Ecology Postmodern Ecology: Ecofeminism, Eco-Marxism, and Heideggerian Ecophilosophy Apocalypse The Trouble with Apocalypse Beyond Apocalypse: Geocriticism Doreen Massey, 1944-2016: A Select Bibliography Space, Place and Gender Space, Place, and Gender in The Importance of Being Earnest
Literary Criticism Freud, Derrida, Friedrich Nietzsche
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Literary Criticism Freud, Derrida, Friedrich Nietzsche

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PDF Download Overview Jacques Derrida, 1930-2004: A Select Bibliography What is Structuralism? What is Derrida’s Problem with Structuralism? What is the Problem with Western Metaphysics? Who are the Precursors of Derrida’s Deconstruction? Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844-1900 Sigmund Freud, 1856-1939 Freud and Nietzsche: Derrida’s ‘Advance’ Martin Heidegger, 1889-1976 Edmund Husserl, 1859-1938 What is the Problem with Speech and Writing? What is Logocentrism? What is the trace? Or, what is différance? What is Derrida’s Problem with Rousseau? What is Grammatology? What is the Problem with ‘What is…?’ Questions? How can Deconstruction be used in Literary Criticism?
Distant Reading Lesson Presentation
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Distant Reading Lesson Presentation

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PDF Download Overview Franco Moretti’s Pact with the Devil Alternatives to Close Reading Surface Reading: Problems with ‘Symptomatic Reading’ Surface Reading: Freud, Marx, Jameson Surface Reading: What Surface? Post-Critical Reading: The Limits of Critique Post-Critical Reading: 5 Qualities of Critique Postcritical Reading: Affinities, Actors, Affect