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English Literature
A Level

'Ariel and Caliban are equally enslaved' Use your knowledge of the play as a whole, and show how far you agree with this view.

Ariel and Caliban are two characters liberated at the end of the play, and left behind on the island when Prospero, their master, leaves. It is made clear very early on that neither creature is at liberty...

Answered by Anoushka O. English Literature tutor
6812 Views

Explore the movement from innocence to experience in L.P.Hartley's 'The Go-Between'.

The deadly nightshade in The Go-Between is used by Hartley as a symbol to exacerbate the sexual tension and bring focus to Leo’s own sexual awakening. Hartley evokes Leo’s sexual awakening throug...

Answered by Zahra G. English Literature tutor
4913 Views

How to compare and contrast the authors of one text with another when writing an essay.

This is a standard A Level essay question which is asked across multiple exam boards with an ultimate theme that the student must write about. It is also a good question to work through with students as ...

Answered by Olivia D. English Literature tutor
3093 Views

How is the pastoral presented in Blake's 'Songs of Innocence and Experience'?

Blake's use of the pastoral can be interpreted in a variety of different ways. Used as a landscape to condemn the current industrialisation of the countryside at the time, Blake holds up a mirror to both ...

Answered by Fae H. English Literature tutor
4252 Views

How do I analyse the setting in a novel?

In order to analyse the setting in a novel, one must pay extra careful attention to the emotional and descriptive detail used by the author. For instance, if the author writes 'the wind h...

Answered by Meerab D. English Literature tutor
3035 Views

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