3-4x key scenes analysed plus a general overview for 11 key characters from King Lear.
Characters included:
Albany
Cordelia
Cornwall
Edgar
Edmund
Fool
Gloucester
Goneril/Regan
Kent
Lear
Oswald
A theme tracking grid for ‘King Lear’. Suitable for all exam boards. Covers key scenes for 9 themes, with an overall summary.
Themes covered:
Aging
Blindness
Chaos/disorder
Forgiveness
Family relationships
Fate
Madness
Gender
Justice
Loyalty
Man, vs nature
Truth
Notes for ‘The Wife of Bath’s Tale’. Suitable for students studying for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature poetry paper.
Includes:
Lines
Overview
Themes
Language and analysis
Form and structure
Contextual ideas
Grid fomatted to fit 1x A4 page
Very detailed A Level English Literature notes for Scene 1 of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ by Tennessee Williams.
Includes:
Quotes
Themes
Techniques and analysis
Context
6x A4 Pages
7x comparative essay plans, with context and examples from texts, for Wuthering Heights and Mrs Dalloway
Included:
No.1: Explore how the authors of your two chosen texts present foreignness
No.2: Explore how the authors of your two chosen text use dreams within their novels.
No.3: Explore how the authors of your two chosen texts present love
No.4: Explore how the authors of your two chosen text use settings within their novels.
No.5: Explore how the authors of your two chosen texts present masculinity
No.6: Explore how the authors of your two chosen text present femininity within their novels.
No.7: Explore how the authors present the influence of the past in your two chosen novels.
A character-tracking grid with analysis for ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ by Tennessee Williams. Features 4 key scenes for each character and a general summary.
Characters included:
Blanche
Stella
Stanley
Mitch
Allan
A list of 19 shared themes between ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘Mrs Dalloway’ with examples for comparison. Particularly useful for the EdExcel AS/A Level English Literature Prose paper.
Themes covered:
Foreignness
Family
Love
Suffering
Religion
Knowledge
Social class
The past
Memory
Women and femininity
Men and masculinity
Setting
Marriage
Time
Reputation
Madness
Death
Communication
Dreams
A comparative grid for Wuthering Heights and Mrs Dalloway.
Quotes from both texts
General comparative points for themes covered
Themes covered:
Foreignness
Family
Love
Suffering
Revision notes for ‘The Wife of Bath’s Prologue’ by Chaucer. Suitable particularly for those studying for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature poetry paper.
Includes:
Line numbers
Overview
Themes
Language
Form and structure
Contextual ideas
Notes and analysis for all of the Poems of the Decade poems prescribed for Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature.
Includes analysis of the title, structure, tone and form, along with a list of themes.
A ‘master’ grid for ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’. Registers features of each scene including:
Time
Plot aspects
Themes
Characters
Objects
Lighting and colours
Temperature
Sound volume
Locations
Sounds/music
Clothing
Tone
Gestures/positions/movements
References and allusions
Animals
List of contextual ideas important to ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘Mrs Dalloway’.
Particularly relevant to students studying for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature prose paper.
Notes covering the key features of ‘The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale’. Particularly suitable for those studying for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature poetry exam.
Covers:
Language features (imagery, allusions, rhetoric, humour etc.)
Structure (use of tricolons, exegesis, interruptions etc.)
Style (traditions, subversions, framing etc.)
Form
Tone
Grid for the Poems of the Decade, as prescribed for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature poetry paper.
Includes analysis of:
Title
Narrative style
Themes
Attitude and tone
Graphology
Rhyme and punctuation
Language
Form and structure
A detailed comparative essay plan in response to the statement ‘explore how the authors of your two chosen texts use dreams within their novels’ in relation to ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘Mrs Dalloway’.
Suitable for those studying for the Pearson Edexcel A Level English Literature prose paper.