Question 1 Skills: Analysing Prose (Edexcel IGCSE English Language A)
Revision Note
Written by: Deb Orrock
Reviewed by: Kate Lee
Question 1 Skills: Analysing Prose
Question 1 will be based on one of the fiction texts in your Edexcel anthology. The anthology consists of ten texts, of which the following are prose:
The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin
The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant
Significant Cigarettes (from The Road Home) by Rose Tremain
Whistle and I’ll Come to You (from The Woman in Black) by Susan Hill
Night by Alice Munro
It’s important to prepare for this question in the exam by studying the ten texts in advance. The following guide is designed to help you in your study of prose. It includes:
Overview
Perspective
Characterisation
Structure
Overview
Analysing a piece of prose involves not just looking at the language the writer has used. You might also wish to consider:
Form | Explanation |
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Plot structure | A plot can be linear:
Or it can be cyclical:
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Mood | Mood describes the feelings or attitudes of the story or characters:
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Juxtaposition | To place two things side by side to compare or contrast for effect:
A foil is a character who contrasts with another character:
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Foreshadowing |
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In medias res | This is when the story starts in the middle of the action |
Flashbacks | A scene set in a time earlier than the main story:
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Soliloquies/dialogue | A soliloquy is a speech which a character makes to themselves:
Dialogue is a conversation between two or more characters in a novel or play |
What to do when analysing the author’s methods
Take a whole-text approach:
In this question, this could involve commenting on structure: “at the start”/“this changes when”/“in contrast…“
Always frame your essay with the author in mind:
As the examiners say: “writers use methods, including language and structure, to form and express their ideas — the choices the writer makes are conscious and deliberate”
Therefore, write that the author “highlights X”, “suggests Y”, “challenges Z”
Use the words “so” and “because” to push you to explain your own ideas further
Zoom out to big ideas in your analysis:
Go from analysing language, or other writer’s choices, to the author’s overall intention or message
This should always link to the focus of the question
What not to do when analysing the author’s methods
Do not just “spot techniques”:
Examiners dislike it when students use overly sophisticated terminology unnecessarily and without analysis
Knowing the names of sophisticated techniques will not gain you any more marks, especially if these techniques are only “spotted” and the author’s intentions for this language are not explained
Instead of technique spotting, focus your analysis on the reasons why the author is presenting the character or theme the way they are
Do not just limit your analysis to a close reading of the author’s use of language:
You gain marks for explaining all of the author’s choices, not just their language
Instead, take a whole-text approach and think about the author’s decisions about:
Form
Structure
Characterisation
Setting
Never retell the story:
“Narrative” and “descriptive” answers get the lowest marks
Move from what the author is presenting to how and why they have made the choices they have
Perspective
The narrative perspective of a piece of prose is the point of view from which the story is told. It is like a lens through which we view characters and events; we interpret those characters and events based on what the speaker shows and tells us.
There are two main types of narrative perspective:
First-person narrator |
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Third-person narrator |
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When considering the narrative perspective, ask yourself if the perspective shifts, or how the perspective affects your understanding of the story.
Characterisation
It is important to remember that characters are constructs, not real people. You should therefore consider what each character’s function is in the text, how they are presented, how they develop and how they interact with each other. Some characters may also be “foil” characters — this means any two characters who are opposites of each other. For example, Harry Potter and Voldemort are foils of each other: they embody the idea of good versus evil. Foil characters therefore help establish important themes.
There are two main types of characterisation:
Direct characterisation |
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Indirect characterisation |
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Often, characters are symbolic of broader ideas or attitudes. It is therefore important to consider how a character changes as a result of the events in a novel.
Structure
When considering structure, you should think about:
The way the writer has put the different parts of the story together
How they set up the world of the story
How they introduce characters
What conflicts there are and how they are resolved
The role of individual chapters or paragraphs in the story arc
How things change by the end of the story
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