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English Literature
A Level

What are the key features of William Blake's "A Little Girl Lost" from his Songs of Experience?

This is the contrary poem to "The Little Girl Lost" which was originally in Innocence. It may help you to use that poem as a counterpoint to this one.

William Blake's work originally inte...

SR
8210 Views

'Charming, creative, chaotic'. By considering the presentation of Puck and the fairies in A Midsummer Night's Dream, evaluate this view.

Intro: Robin Goodfellow and the fairies, in the round, can be considered 'Charming, creative and chaotic'. This phrase, in itself, can be interpreted in many different ways as we do not only see these qua...

DT
5051 Views

What method would you suggest for structuring an A Level English Literature essay effectively?

At A level, I found the best method for structuring essays to be to scan through your text, finding and writing down quotes that link in any way to the topic of the question. Then, group quotes together i...

MC
3944 Views

What is the function of the variety of narrative perspectives in Mary Shelley's 'Frankenstein'?

The variety of narrative perspectives in 'Frankenstein' are used by Shelley to relativise the interpretation of any particular narrator, and so to provoke the reader to think harder about the characters a...

JM
17101 Views

To what extent are the three nineteenth century texts you've studied concerned with class and social stagnation?

I would argue that, based on my own reading of Emily Bronte’s ‘Wuthering Heights’, Jane Austen’s ‘Emma’ and ‘Selected Poems’ by Tennsyon, that nineteenth century texts are primarily concerned with class a...

JH
3746 Views

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