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English Literature ‘Frameworks’ 6: Dialogue

Steph Jackson | Sunday October 31, 2010

Categories: Courses, A Level, AQA A Level, AQA A Level English Literature A, LITA1, LITA2, LITA3, LITA4, AQA A Level English Literature B, LITB1, LITB2, LITB3, LITB4, EDEXCEL A Level, EDEXCEL A Level English Literature, 6ET01, 6ET02, 6ET03, 6ET04, OCR A Level, OCR A Level English Literature, F661, F662, F663, F664, WJEC A Level, WJEC A Level English Literature, LT1, LT2, LT3, LT4, Hot Entries

Introduction

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The sixth in the Englishedu series on ‘frameworks’ for A Level English Literature, this guide explores how to analyse the dialogue in novels, short stories or prose extracts in order to allow students access to the highest grades.

Dialogue: Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

The most straightforward way of demonstrating how to closely analyse a text in terms of the theme above is to exemplify it. The extract below is followed by a series of bullet points which demonstrate how to analyse closely using carefully chosen quotations in a variety of ways. These bullet points also include commentaries which aim to explain how and why such sections have been analysed and what they could highlight within the main text, contextually and thematically.

There are, of course, many more things that could be said about each extract, but it’s hoped that it will prove useful in your initial teaching stages to model it using the examples and then to ask students to find other things that they could analyse themselves as well as to consider ‘alternative’ interpretations and to derive possible contextual aspects.

From Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Crooks put his dark chin into his pink palm.  ‘You travel aroun’ with George, don’t ya?’

‘Sure.  Me an’ him goes ever’ place together.’

Crooks continued,...


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