Starter quiz
- What is a topic sentence?
- a sentence at the beginning of an analysis paragraph, introducing your argument ✓
- a sentence in the middle of an analysis paragraph, justifying your argument
- a sentence at the end of an analysis paragraph, summarising your argument
- a sentence use to embed a quotation
- a sentence used to explore the wider context of a poem
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- Which of these sentences contains tentative language?
- The boy fell over.
- Unfortunately, the boy fell over.
- Falling over, the boy scraped his knee.
- From the cuts on his knee, we can infer that the boy may have fallen over. ✓
- The boy may have fallen over. ✓
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- 'Sonnet 29' focuses on which types of desire?
- emotional ✓
- physical/sexual ✓
- materialistic
- spiritual
- philosophical
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- In 'Letters from Yorkshire', we could argue that the speaker's relationship with the man is...
- ending
- toxic
- platonic ✓
- ambiguous ✓
- unrequited ✓
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- By the end of 'Sonnet 29', the speaker's desire is fulfilled because her lover returns to her whereas in 'Letters from Yorkshire' the speaker's desire is left unfulfilled because...
- Dooley ends with a rhetorical question to show the speaker's confusion.
- Dooley ends on a bleak final image, emphasising the distance between them. ✓
- Dooley's use of rhyme scheme leaves the last stanza unfinished.
- Dooley's use of verbs implies the speaker's desires haven't been satisfied.
- Dooley emphasises the spiritual connection she has with the man.
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- Which of these quotations from 'Sonnet 29' best implies that the speaker's desire is intense and corruptive?
- "O my palm tree"
- "I do not think of thee - I am too near thee."
- "my thoughts do twine and bud [...] and soon there's nought to see" ✓
- "Drop heavily down, - burst, shattered, everywhere!"
- "Rustle thy boughs and set thy trunk all bare"
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Exit quiz
- What does the word 'nuanced' mean?
- uncertain or provisional, subject to change or adjustment
- subtly different aspects or details, often with underlying complexity ✓
- comprehensive, thorough, including many specifics or particulars
- uses a range of sentence types to engage the reader
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- To ensure your analysis is detailed, you should...
- use tentative language
- zoom in on key words/phrases in your supporting evidence ✓
- make sure your concluding sentences links back to your initial argument
- identify the writer's use of methods ✓
- consider the writer's intentions ✓
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- Identify the sentence fragment which is a participle phrase. 'Writing in the Georgian era, which was known to be patriarchal, Barrett Browning's writing often uses a strong, powerful female voice.'
- "strong, powerful"
- "Writing in the Georgian, era which was known to be patriarchal," ✓
- "Barrett Browning's writing often uses a strong, powerful female voice"
- "Writing"
- "which was known to be patriarchal"
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- Why do we use tentative language?
- Because we haven't read enough poetry to be sure.
- It's the way we traditionally structure analysis writing.
- Because we cannot ever be certain about why a writer made certain choices. ✓
- It means we can get away with being a bit wrong.
- Because a writer may change their mind about why they did something.
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- Choose the best participle phrase to add to the beginning of this sentence. __________ Dooley uses 'Letters from Yorkshire' to consider the complexities of long-distance relationships.
- Written in the twenty-first century,
- Believed to be one of the first Romantic poets,
- Arguably a poem about unrequited romance
- Exploring the theme of communication often in her poetry, ✓
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- Why is using advanced vocabulary important to ensuring your analysis writing is nuanced?
- It means that your initial inferences are more specific and less general. ✓
- It shows you know a lot about the poem.
- It creates the impression that this will be an intelligent analysis.
- It demonstrates that you can spell difficult words.
- It allows you to explore different aspects of the same idea. ✓
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Worksheet
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Lesson Details
Key learning points
- Participle phrases can make topic sentences more specific and precise.
- Comparative conjunctions should be used to show the relationship between the two texts.
- Analysis should be detailed, tentative and nuanced, referencing poetic methods.
Common misconception
Analysis should be led by identification of the writer's methods.
Effective comparative analysis should be led by key ideas and then supported by textual evidence and identification of the writer's methods and intentions.
Keywords
Nuanced - subtly different aspects or details, often with underlying complexity
Tentative - uncertain or provisional, subject to change or adjustment
Detailed - comprehensive, thorough, including many specifics or particulars
Participle phrase - part of a sentence that begins with a verb, used to add extra detail or description
Desire - strong feeling of longing or wanting, often for something or someone specific
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