Modern Texts and Poetry
Modern Texts and Poetry
:::info Board Coverage AQA Paper 2 | Edexcel Paper 1 Component 2 (Modern Prose/Drama) and Paper 2 (Poetry) | OCR Paper 2 | WJEC/Eduqas Paper 2
1. Modern Texts (Post-1914)
The “modern texts” component of GCSE English Literature encompasses fiction, drama, and occasionally Non-fiction published after 1914. The choice of modern text varies by board and by centre. The Following are the most commonly set texts.
1.1 Modern Drama
An Inspector Calls by J.B. Priestley (1945)
Though technically a post-1914 drama text, Priestley’s play is so widely studied that it warrants Extended treatment. Set in the affluent Birling household in 1912, the play dramatises the Interruption of a family celebration by the mysterious Inspector Goole, who interrogates each family Member about their involvement in the death of Eva Smith, a young working-class woman.
The play is structured as a well-made play: a single setting (the Birlings’ dining room), a tight Timeframe (a single evening), escalating revelations, and a climactic twist (the Inspector’s Identity and the possibility that he was not a real police officer). Priestley uses this Conventional structure to deliver a radical political argument about collective responsibility and The interconnectedness of all members of society.
Key themes: Social responsibility and collective guilt; class inequality and the abuse of power; Generational conflict (the younger Birlings learn; the older ones do not); gender and the Exploitation of women; capitalism versus socialism; the tension between individualism and community.
Key dramatic devices:
- The Inspector as a mouthpiece. The Inspector articulates Priestley’s socialist philosophy, but the play’s ending complicates his authority: if he is not a real inspector, is his message still valid? The strongest responses will grapple with this ambiguity.
- Dramatic irony. Birling’s speeches about the future (“the Titanic… Absolutely unsinkable”; “there isn’t a chance of war”) create dramatic irony for the 1945 audience who know what happened in 1912 and after.
- The structure of revelation. Each family member is interrogated in turn, and each revelation deepens the audience’s understanding of the Birlings’ collective guilt. The structure is cumulative and inexorable.
- Stage directions. Priestley’s stage directions are precise and loaded with symbolic meaning. The “pink and intimate” lighting at the beginning that becomes “brighter and harder” after the Inspector’s arrival signals the shift from comfortable illusion to uncomfortable truth.
Blood Brothers by Willy Russell (1983)
A musical drama tracing the lives of twin brothers separated at birth: Mickey, raised by a Working-class mother in Liverpool, and Eddie, raised by the wealthy family who employ the mother as A cleaner. The play uses a narrator who comments on the action and foreshadows the tragic ending, Creating a sense of inevitability that mirrors the Greek tragic tradition.
Key themes: Nature versus nurture; class inequality and its consequences; the role of education In determining life chances; superstition and fate; friendship and loyalty; the destructive power of Social division.
1.2 Modern Prose
Animal Farm by George Orwell (1945)
An allegorical novella in which the animals of Manor Farm overthrow their human owner and establish A collective society. The pigs, led by Napoleon, gradually assume control and become Indistinguishable from the humans they replaced. The novella is a sustained allegory of the Russian Revolution and the subsequent betrayal of its ideals under Stalin.
Key themes: Power and corruption; propaganda and the manipulation of truth; class hierarchy; the Betrayal of revolutionary ideals; the relationship between language and power; the danger of Political complacency.
Lord of the Flies by William Golding (1954)
A novel in which a group of schoolboys, stranded on a desert island after a plane crash, rapidly Descend from civilised behaviour to savagery. Golding uses the island as a microcosm of society, Arguing that the capacity for evil is inherent in human nature rather than a product of social Corruption (a direct rebuttal of the Romantic optimism of R.M. Ballantyne’s The Coral Island, 1857).
Key themes: Civilisation versus savagery; the loss of innocence; power and leadership; the beast Within; the role of rules and authority; the relationship between the individual and the group.
1.3 Modern Non-Fiction
Some specifications include non-fiction texts in the modern component. These may include memoirs, Essays, or journalism. The analytical approach is the same as for fiction: attend to language, Structure, and the relationship between form and content.
2. Modern Poetry: Poets and Anthologies
2.1 Key Modern Poets
The following poets feature most frequently across GCSE specifications. The poems listed are Representative rather than exhaustive; students should consult their own board’s anthology for the Specific poems they are required to study.
Wilfred Owen (1893—1918)
The definitive poet of the First World War. Owen’s poems are characterised by their graphic imagery, Their bitter irony, and their moral outrage at the waste and horror of industrialised warfare. Key Poems: “Dulce et Decorum Est,” “Anthem for Doomed Youth,” “Exposure,” “The Send-Off.”
Siegfried Sassoon (1886—1967)
Like Owen, a war poet whose early romantic patriotism gave way to savage indignation. Sassoon’s Poetry is more direct and satirical than Owen’s, less reliant on complex figurative language and More on biting statement. Key poems: “The General,” “Suicide in the Trenches,” “Base Details.”
Sylvia Plath (1932—1963)
An American poet whose work explores mental illness, identity, gender, and the struggle for artistic Self-definition. Plath’s poetry is intensely personal, often confessional, and characterised by Striking, sometimes disturbing imagery. Key poems: “Poppies in July,” “The Moon and the Yew Tree,” “Edge,” “Mirror.”
Ted Hughes (1930—1998)
Poet Laureate from 1984 to 1998, Hughes is best known for his poems about the natural world, which Present nature as a site of violence, power, and primal energy. His marriage to Plath and his poems About their relationship have also attracted critical attention. Key poems: “Hawk Roosting,” “Bayonet Charge,” “The Thought-Fox,” “Wind.”
Seamus Heaney (1939—2013)
An Irish poet whose work explores the landscapes and histories of rural Ireland, the conflict Between personal and political identity, and the relationship between the individual and the Ancestral past. Heaney won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1995. Key poems: “Digging,” “Mid-Term Break,” “Follower,” “Death of a Naturalist.”
Simon Armitage (b. 1963)
A contemporary British poet whose work is characterised by its accessibility, its engagement with Everyday experience, and its formal inventiveness. Armitage frequently uses colloquial language and Contemporary settings. Key poems: “Remains,” “The Manhunt,” “Chainsaw Versus the Pampas Grass.”
Imtiaz Dharker (b. 1954)
A poet born in Pakistan, raised in Glasgow, and based in Mumbai, Dharker’s work explores themes of Identity, displacement, cultural hybridity, and the tension between freedom and confinement. Key Poems: “Tissue,” “The Blessing.”
Benjamin Zephaniah (1958—2023)
A British-Jamaican dub poet whose work addresses racism, social injustice, and the experience of the Black British community. Zephaniah’s poetry is performative, rhythmic, and politically engaged. Key Poems: “No Problem,” “The British,” “What Stephen Lawrence Has Taught Us.”
Dennis Weir
A contemporary poet whose work appears on the AQA “Power and Conflict” cluster. Weir’s “Poppies” is A dramatic monologue spoken by a mother addressing her son who has gone to war, exploring grief, Memory, and the emotional cost of conflict.
2.2 Board-Specific Anthologies
AQA: “Love and Relationships” (15 poems) or “Power and Conflict” (15 poems). Students study one Cluster and answer one comparative question.
Edexcel: An anthology of 16 poems organised under the themes of “Conflict” or “Comedy and Genre.” Students study the full anthology and answer one essay question on a named poem, comparing It with at least one other from the anthology.
WJEC/Eduqas: An anthology of 18 poems by Welsh and English-language poets, organised Thematically. Students answer one question requiring comparison of two poems from the anthology.
OCR: Pre-1900 poetry is studied alongside Shakespeare in Paper 1 (see the Shakespeare guide). Paper 2 includes unseen poetry comparison.
3. Poetic Techniques: A Comprehensive Guide
3.1 Form
Form refers to the overall shape or type of the poem. The form of a poem is not arbitrary; it is a Choice that affects how the poem communicates its meaning.
- Sonnet. A fourteen-line poem, in iambic pentameter, with a specific rhyme scheme. The Shakespearean sonnet has the pattern ababcdcdefefgg, ending with a rhyming couplet that often delivers a conclusive or summarising statement. The Petrarchan sonnet has the pattern abbaabbacdecde, with a volta (turn) between the octave (first eight lines) and the sestet (last six lines). The volta marks a shift in argument, tone, or perspective.
- Ode. A formal, often ceremonious lyric poem that addresses and celebrates a person, object, or idea. Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale” and Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind” are canonical examples; Owen’s “Anthem for Doomed Youth” adapts the form to an anti-war purpose.
- Elegy. A poem of mourning or lament. Tennyson’s “In Memoriam A.H.H.” and Gray’s “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” are the most famous examples; Owen’s war poems function as modern elegies.
- Dramatic monologue. A poem spoken by a single character to a silent audience, revealing the speaker’s personality and situation through their own words. Browning’s “My Last Duchess” is the archetypal example; Weir’s “Poppies” and Duffy’s “War Photographer” are modern instances.
- Free verse. Poetry without a regular metre or rhyme scheme. Free verse does not mean formless: poets who write in free verse make deliberate choices about line length, stanza structure, rhythm, and repetition. The absence of conventional form is itself meaningful.
- Ballad. A narrative poem, traditionally composed in quatrains with an abcb rhyme scheme and alternating iambic tetrameter and trimeter. Ballads tell stories, often of love, death, or the supernatural, and frequently employ repetition and a refrain.
3.2 Structure
Structure refers to the internal organisation of the poem: how it is divided into stanzas, how the Lines and stanzas relate to each other, and how the poem develops from beginning to end.
- Stanza structure. The number of lines per stanza, the rhyme scheme within stanzas, and the pattern of stanza breaks all contribute to the poem’s meaning. A regular stanza structure creates a sense of order and control; irregular or disrupted stanzas create a sense of instability or unpredictability.
- Line breaks. Where a poet chooses to end a line affects the rhythm, the emphasis, and the meaning. A line break that comes in the middle of a syntactic unit creates enjambment (see below), which speeds up the reading and creates a sense of continuity between lines. An end-stopped line, where a line ends with a complete syntactic unit and punctuation, creates a pause and a sense of finality.
- Patterning and variation. Regular patterns of rhyme, metre, or stanza structure that are disrupted or varied draw attention to the moment of disruption and signal a shift in meaning, tone, or perspective.
3.3 Imagery and Symbolism
- Simile. A comparison using “like” or “as.” Owen’s description of the gas victim — “flound’ring like a man in fire or lime” — creates a visceral image of suffering through comparison.
- Metaphor. A comparison that states that one thing is another, without “like” or “as.” Hughes’s description of the hawk in “Hawk Roosting” — “My feet are locked upon the rough bark” — is metaphorical: the hawk’s physical position becomes a symbol of power and permanence.
- Personification. The attribution of human qualities to non-human entities. Owen’s “Anthem for Doomed Youth” personifies the weapons of war: “the monstrous anger of the guns” and “the stuttering rifles’ rapid rattle.”
- Symbolism. The use of an object, image, or action to represent a broader idea. In “Poppies” by Weir, the poppies symbolise both remembrance and the mother’s grief; the dove symbolises peace; the songbird symbolises the son’s innocence.
- Pathetic fallacy. The attribution of human emotion to natural phenomena. This is a specific type of personification particularly common in 19th-century poetry and prose.
3.4 Sound Devices
Sound devices create auditory effects that complement and reinforce the poem’s meaning.
| Device | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Alliteration | Repetition of initial consonant sounds | ”The bleak and barren battlefield” |
| Assonance | Repetition of vowel sounds | ”The moonlit loop of the road” |
| Consonance | Repetition of consonant sounds within words | ”The accident of war” |
| Sibilance | Repetition of ‘s’ or ‘sh’ sounds | ”The silent snake slid southward” |
| Onomatopoeia | Words that imitate the sound they describe | ”Crash,” “bang,” “whisper,” “thud” |
3.5 Rhythm and Metre
Rhythm is the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry. Metre is the regular Repetition of a specific rhythmic pattern.
- Iambic pentameter. Five iambic feet per line (unstressed-stressed). The dominant metre of English poetry from Shakespeare to the present day.
- Trochaic metre. Stressed-unstressed syllable pattern. Creates a more driving, insistent rhythm than iambic metre. Blake’s “The Tyger” (“Tyger Tyger, burning bright”) is trochaic.
- Irregular rhythm. Many modern and contemporary poems deliberately disrupt regular metre to create effects of uncertainty, fragmentation, or natural speech.
3.6 Rhyme Scheme
A rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhyming words at the ends of lines, conventionally represented by Letters (a, b, c, etc.). A regular rhyme scheme (e.g., abab cdcd) creates a sense of order and Control. An irregular or absent rhyme scheme suggests disorder, uncertainty, or the rejection of Convention.
Half-rhyme (or slant rhyme) occurs when the final consonant sounds match but the preceding Vowels do not (e.g., “home” and “come”). Half-rhyme creates a sense of incompleteness or dissonance. Owen frequently uses half-rhyme to convey the horror and futility of war.
3.7 Enjambment and Caesura
Enjambment is the continuation of a sentence or phrase across a line break without a punctuation Mark. It creates a sense of forward momentum, urgency, or the overflow of thought beyond the Boundaries of a single line.
Caesura is a pause within a line, marked by punctuation (a comma, full stop, dash, or Semicolon). It creates emphasis on the words on either side of the pause and can disrupt the Rhythmic flow, creating a sense of hesitation, fragmentation, or dramatic tension.
Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est” uses both devices to devastating effect:
Gas! GAS! Quick, boys — An ecstasy of fumbling Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time
The exclamation marks and the dash create caesurae that mimic the panic and urgency of the gas Attack. The enjambment between the lines carries the reader forward without respite, replicating the Disorienting speed of the event.
4. Poetry Analysis Framework
When analysing a poem, address the following five elements in a structured, integrated manner.
4.1 Form and Structure
What type of poem is this? How is it organised? Is the structure regular or irregular, and what does That choice suggest? Where are the turning points, and how do they affect the poem’s meaning?
4.2 Voice and Tone
Who is speaking? To whom? What is their attitude toward their subject? Tone is the emotional quality Of the speaker’s voice: it may be angry, tender, bitter, nostalgic, ironic, resigned, celebratory, Or any combination of these. Tone is conveyed through word choice, sentence structure, and the Relationship between the speaker and the subject.
4.3 Language and Imagery
What specific word choices (diction) does the poet make? What figurative language (metaphor, simile, Personification) is used? What images are created, and what senses do they appeal to? How do these Linguistic choices create meaning and effect?
4.4 Theme and Ideas
What is the poem about at the level of ideas? What larger questions does it raise? How does the poet Use form, structure, language, and imagery to explore those questions?
4.5 Personal Response
What is your response to the poem? Which aspects are most effective, and why? A personal response is Not a substitute for analysis, but it can add depth and conviction to an essay when it is grounded In specific textual evidence.
Worked Analysis: "Bayonet Charge" by Ted Hughes (Excerpt)
Form and Structure: The poem is written in three stanzas of unequal length, with irregular line Lengths and no regular rhyme scheme. The first stanza is the longest and most chaotic, mirroring the Disorientation of the soldier’s charge. The second and third stanzas shorten, as if the soldier’s Thoughts are becoming more focused and desperate.
Voice and Tone: The poem is narrated in the third person but from a close perspective that Places the reader inside the soldier’s consciousness. The tone is urgent, disorienting, and Ultimately despairing. The rhetorical question in the final stanza — “In what cold clockwork of the Stars and the nations / Was he the hand pointing that second?” — shifts the tone to philosophical Anguish, questioning the meaning of individual action in the vast machinery of war.
Language and Imagery: Hughes uses violent, visceral imagery to convey the physical reality of The charge: the soldier is “sweating like molten iron,” the air is “a patriotic tear” (an ironic Phrase that undercuts the glorification of war). The extended metaphor of the soldier as a Mechanical object — “cold clockwork,” “the hand pointing that second” — strips him of his Individuality and reduces him to a component of a larger, impersonal mechanism.
Theme and Ideas: The poem explores the dehumanisation of the individual soldier in modern Warfare. The soldier’s physical action (the bayonet charge) is divorced from any sense of purpose or Meaning; he is “bewildered” and “bewildering,” caught between instinct and obligation. The poem Questions whether individual courage has any significance in the industrialised machinery of Conflict.
Personal Response: Hughes’s use of violent, kinetic imagery creates an almost physical Experience for the reader. The poem is most effective in its final lines, where the metaphorical Scope expands from the individual soldier to the cosmic scale, suggesting that the individual is not Merely caught in the machinery of war but in the machinery of history itself.
5. Comparative Poetry Analysis Methodology
Comparative poetry analysis is assessed on all major boards. The following methodology provides a Structured approach.
5.1 Planning the Comparison
Before writing, identify the points of comparison between the poems. These might include:
- Similar treatment of a shared theme. Both Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est” and Sassoon’s “Suicide in the Trenches” present war as destructive and dehumanising, but they do so through different techniques and from different perspectives.
- Different treatment of a shared theme. Two poems may address the same theme but reach different conclusions or evoke different responses. For example, two love poems might both explore the pain of separation but differ in their tone: one resigned, one defiant.
- Similar techniques used for different purposes. Both poets might use enjambment, but one might use it to convey urgency while the other uses it to suggest emotional overflow.
5.2 Structuring the Comparative Essay
The most effective comparative essays use integrated comparison: each paragraph makes a point About both poems, rather than writing about one poem and then the other.
A comparative paragraph structure might follow this pattern:
- Topic sentence identifying the point of comparison.
- Analysis of Poem A with quotation.
- Comparison to Poem B with quotation.
- Evaluation of the significance of the similarity or difference.
- Link back to the overall argument.
5.3 Comparative Connectors
Use comparative language to make the links between poems explicit:
- “Similarly…”
- “In contrast…”
- “Whereas [Poem A] presents… [Poem B] suggests…”
- “Both poems explore… But while [Poem A] uses… To achieve this effect, [Poem B] relies on…”
- “A key difference between the two poems lies in…”
- “While sharing the theme of… The poems diverge in their treatment of…“
6. Unseen Poetry Analysis
The unseen poetry component requires students to analyse one or two poems they have not studied Before. This tests transferable analytical skills rather than rote knowledge.
6.1 Step-by-Step Approach
Step 1: Read the poem at least twice. On the first reading, focus on overall meaning: what is Happening, what is the subject, what is the speaker’s attitude? On the second reading, focus on Technique: form, structure, language, imagery, sound.
Step 2: Identify the form. Is it a sonnet, a free-verse lyric, a ballad, a dramatic monologue? The form provides a framework for analysis.
Step 3: Analyse the opening. The opening lines of a poem often establish the tone, the Situation, and the central concern. Begin your analysis here.
Step 4: Trace the development. How does the poem develop from beginning to end? Is there a volta (turn)? Does the tone shift? Does the imagery change?
Step 5: Analyse the ending. The final lines of a poem often carry the greatest weight. How does The ending resolve, complicate, or leave open the poem’s central concern?
Step 6: Select quotations. Choose two or three precisely selected quotations that demonstrate The poem’s key techniques and their effects. In an unseen poetry response, quality of analysis Matters more than quantity of quotation.
Step 7: Write a thesis statement. Before beginning the essay, formulate a clear argument about The poem’s meaning and how it is achieved. The thesis should be specific, debatable, and grounded in The text.
6.2 Timing
For the unseen poetry question, time management is critical:
- 5 minutes: Read the poem(s) twice and annotate.
- 5 minutes: Plan the essay (thesis, key points, quotations).
- 20 minutes: Write the response.
6.3 Common Pitfalls in Unseen Poetry
- Panicking about not understanding the poem. Not every poem yields its full meaning on a first reading. Focus on what you can analyse: the language, the imagery, the form. Even a partial understanding, well-supported with evidence, will earn marks.
- Writing about the poem without quoting from it. Every analytical point must be supported by a quotation, even (especially) in an unseen response.
- Ignoring form and structure. It is tempting to focus on language and imagery because they are more immediately accessible, but form and structure are equally important and often carry significant meaning.
- Failing to address the second poem in a comparison. If the question asks for comparison, both poems must be discussed. A response that addresses only one poem cannot earn marks for comparison.
7. Key Themes in Modern Poetry
7.1 War
War poetry is dominated by the First World War poets (Owen, Sassoon, Rosenberg, Brooke) and their Successors. The dominant themes are the horror and futility of industrialised warfare; the betrayal Of the young by the old; the gap between the rhetoric of patriotism and the reality of combat; the Physical and psychological damage inflicted on soldiers; and the inadequacy of language to convey The experience of war.
7.2 Identity
Poets explore personal, cultural, and national identity in relation to family, community, language, Place, and history. Dharker’s poems address the experience of cultural hybridity; Zephaniah’s Explore Black British identity; Heaney’s engage with Irish identity and the colonial legacy.
7.3 Place
The relationship between identity and place is a recurrent theme. Heaney’s rural Ireland, Dharker’s Urban landscapes, Hughes’s Yorkshire moors — these places are not merely settings but sites of Meaning that shape the poems’ concerns.
7.4 Relationships
Love, loss, family, and friendship are explored across a wide range of forms and tones, from the Intimate tenderness of Armitage’s “The Manhunt” to the bitter grief of Weir’s “Poppies.” The AQA “Love and Relationships” cluster provides a comprehensive survey of this theme.
7.5 Power
Power — political, social, personal — is explored in its various manifestations: the power of the State over the individual (Owen, Sassoon), the power of nature (Hughes), the power of language to Shape perception (Zephaniah), and the power dynamics of personal relationships.
7.6 Nature
Nature in modern poetry is rarely the benign, picturesque landscape of Romantic tradition. For Hughes, nature is a site of violence and primal energy. For Heaney, it is a repository of memory and Ancestral identity. For Owen, the natural world is violated and destroyed by war.
7.7 Time and Mortality
The passage of time, ageing, loss, and death are universal themes in poetry. Owen’s “Futility” Questions the meaning of life in the face of death; Heaney’s “Mid-Term Break” confronts the Suddenness of loss; Plath’s late poems approach mortality with a clinical, almost forensic Intensity.
8. Board-Specific Guidance
AQA
Paper 2, Section B: Poetry. Students answer one question from their chosen cluster (Love and Relationships, or Power and Conflict). The question requires comparison of one named poem with at Least one other from the cluster. The question carries 30 marks. The paper is closed-book.
Section C: Unseen Poetry. Students answer one question on one unseen poem (24 marks) and one Comparative question on two unseen poems (8 marks).
Edexcel
Paper 2, Part 2: Poetry. Students answer one question comparing two poems from the examined Anthology. The question names one poem and requires comparison with at least one other. The question Carries 32 marks. The paper is closed-book.
OCR
Paper 1, Section B: Pre-1900 Poetry. Students study a prescribed anthology of poetry from the English literary heritage alongside Shakespeare. The question requires comparison of two poems from The anthology. Open-book.
Paper 2, Section C: Unseen Poetry. Students answer one comparative question on two unseen Contemporary poems. The question carries 24 marks.
WJEC/Eduqas
Paper 2, Section B: Poetry. Students answer one question comparing two poems from the prescribed Anthology (one named, one chosen). The question carries 20 marks. Open-book.
Paper 2, Section C: Unseen Poetry. Students answer one question on one unseen poem. The question Carries 10 marks.
9. Common Pitfalls
- Failing to compare. If the question asks for comparison, both poems must be discussed in an integrated manner. A response that writes about one poem and then the other, without drawing connections, will lose marks for comparison.
- Quoting too much and analysing too little. A response that consists mainly of quotations with minimal analysis will not score highly. Every quotation must be followed by analysis that explains its effect and links it to the poem’s themes.
- Identifying techniques without explaining effects. “The poet uses a metaphor” is a starting point, not a conclusion. The response must explain what the metaphor is, how it works, and what meaning or effect it produces.
- Ignoring the poem’s form and structure. Language and imagery are important, but form and structure are equally significant and must be addressed.
- Writing in generalities. “The poet uses imagery to create a picture in the reader’s mind” is a truism that tells the examiner nothing. Be specific: identify the image, quote it, and explain its precise effect.
- Not managing time effectively. The poetry section is time-pressured. Students must allocate their time carefully and avoid spending too long on the anthology question at the expense of unseen poetry.
Common Pitfalls
- Confusing key definitions — Students often mix up similar terminology in Modern Texts and Poetry. Always write the precise definition as given in the specification.
- Missing command words — Failing to address “explain”, “compare”, or “evaluate” properly. Each command word requires a different style of response.
- Insufficient working — In calculation or analysis questions, marks are awarded for method. Show every intermediate step.
Worked Examples
Example 1:
A typical exam question on Modern Texts and Poetry requires you to apply your knowledge to an unfamiliar context. Read the question carefully, identify the key concept being tested, and structure your answer using the appropriate terminology.
Example 2:
Multi-step problems in Modern Texts and Poetry often combine two or more concepts. Break the problem down: identify what you need to find, recall the relevant formula or principle, substitute values, and state your answer with correct units or formatting.
Summary
This topic covers the analytical frameworks and techniques relevant to modern texts and poetry, including key terminology, approaches, and critical perspectives.
Key concepts include:
- grammar and syntax
- semantic change and language acquisition
- sociolinguistics and language variation
- discourse analysis
- theories of language and meaning
Developing a precise analytical vocabulary and practising close reading are essential for strong performance in this area.
:::