Question 2 (AQA GCSE English Language): Revision Notes
📚 Revision Notes
Paper 1 Question 2 Skills: Language Analysis
Understanding the Question
Question 2 on Paper 1 asks you to analyse how the writer uses language to achieve effects and influence the reader. You will focus on a specific extract from the text.
Key Elements to Analyse
- Word Choice (Diction)
- Look for powerful, emotive, or descriptive words.
- Consider the connotations of words and how they contribute to the mood or atmosphere.
- Example: "The eerie silence" (eerie suggests an unsettling or spooky atmosphere).
- Imagery
- Identify any similes, metaphors, or personification.
- Explain how these images help the reader visualise scenes or emotions.
- Example: "The trees whispered secrets to the night" (personification creates a mysterious, enchanting scene).
- Sentence Structure
- Analyse the use of short, punchy sentences versus long, complex ones.
- Consider how sentence length impacts the pace and tension.
- Example: "She ran. She stumbled. She fell." (short sentences create a sense of urgency and panic).
- Figurative Language
- Look for metaphors, similes, and hyperbole.
- Explain how these devices create vivid imagery or emphasise certain feelings or ideas.
- Example: "His smile was a beacon of hope" (metaphor emphasises the positivity and brightness of his smile).
- Tone and Mood
- Identify the tone of the passage (e.g., angry, joyful, melancholic).
- Discuss how the language choices contribute to the overall mood.
- Example: "The oppressive heat weighed down on them" (word choices like "oppressive" contribute to a heavy, stifling mood).
- Sound Devices
- Notice any alliteration, assonance, or onomatopoeia.
- Analyse how these sounds contribute to the effect or atmosphere.
- Example: "The buzzing bees" (onomatopoeia creates a sense of the natural, lively environment).
Steps for Analysis
- Identify: Locate specific examples of language features.
- Explain: Describe what the feature is and how it is used.
- Effect: Discuss the effect on the reader and how it contributes to the writer's purpose.
Example Analysis
Text: "The storm unleashed its fury, battering the helpless town with relentless rain and howling winds."
- Word Choice: "Unleashed its fury" – suggests violence and anger, creating a dramatic and intense image of the storm.
- Imagery: "Battering the helpless town" – personification, emphasising the town's vulnerability.
- Sound Devices: "Howling winds" – onomatopoeia, adding to the auditory imagery and enhancing the sense of chaos.
Understanding Structure:
Structural analysis examines how a writer organises and sequences the events, ideas, and information in a text. It involves looking at the order of events, shifts in focus, perspectives, and the overall progression of the narrative.
A useful acronym to guide you is BEST SECONDZ:
- Beginnings
- Endings
- Sentence lengths (relative to the surrounding text)
- Time (e.g. chronological, flashback)
- Shifts in focus (e.g. changes in weather, time, place, person, theme)
- Echoes from earlier in the text (repetition)
- Contrast
- Order of events/ideas (do they follow on from one another?)
- Narrative perspective (e.g. first, second, third person)
- Discourse markers & dialogue (connectives e.g. After)
- Zooming into description (be sure not to start analysing language!)
infoNote
NEW VOCAB:
- equilibrium: without too much tension
- false sense of equilibrium: not as calm as it may seem
- disequilibrium: a lot of tension
- prolepsis: flash-forward
- analepsis: flash-back
- non-linear narrative: not told chronologically
- frame narrative: is it a story within a story?
- retrospective: told from the future, looking back at the past