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What opens a comparative paragraph?
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All Flashcards in Topic 4.3
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4.3.110 cards
What opens a comparative paragraph?
A comparative topic sentence naming both works and the shared point.
Weave or stack?
Weave — move between the works, ideally within sentences.
What is the ‘stacked’ mistake?
All of Work A, then all of Work B, with a ‘similarly’ bolted on.
How does the paragraph end?
By linking the comparison back to the thesis.
Which criterion is won here?
B2 — comparison and contrast.
What must you analyse in EACH work?
A technique and its effect (Criterion B1).
A connective for weaving?
‘whereas’, ‘similarly’, ‘by contrast’, ‘like’.
The comparative paragraph shape?
Comparative topic sentence → woven works → link to thesis.
How close together should the works appear?
Ideally within the same sentences — not in two blocks.
What does a comparative topic sentence contain?
Both works and the shared point (‘Both present X, but…’).
4.3.210 cards
Why is ‘both use imagery’ weak?
True of almost every book — compare the effect, not the label.
Two ways to compare technique?
Same device / different effects; or different devices / same effect.
What must a technique comparison end on?
What the difference reveals about each work's meaning.
Which criteria does this serve?
B1 (authorial choices) and B2 (comparison).
Same device, opposite effect — example?
Light imagery for hope in one work, for threat in the other.
Different device, same effect — example?
One builds dread with short sentences, the other with a slow metaphor.
The commonest weak comparison?
Naming a shared device without comparing its effect.
What is the ‘common ground’?
The shared technique — the starting point, not the whole point.
Technique comparison in one line?
Technique → effect → meaning, in BOTH works, compared.
Does the device have to be identical to compare?
No — different devices reaching one effect is a rich comparison.
4.3.310 cards
Theme vs argument?
Theme = the topic; argument = what the work says about it.
Why is ‘both are about love’ weak?
A shared topic with no argument — almost every work qualifies.
What do you compare?
Each work's argument/claim about the theme.
Where should each argument be rooted?
In specific textual moments and choices.
Best kind of thematic comparison?
Two works reaching different or opposed verdicts on the same theme.
Which criteria does this serve?
A (interpretation) and B2 (comparison).
A theme is a…
Topic (love, power, memory) — the starting point, not the whole point.
An argument is a…
Claim the work makes about the theme.
Common weak move?
Naming a shared theme without comparing the arguments.
Thematic comparison in one line?
‘A argues X about the theme; B argues Y’ — rooted in the text.
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What are ‘big’ authorial choices?
Whole-work decisions: form, structure, perspective, genre.
Why compare big choices?
They show you read each work as a designed whole — high-level analysis.
What must you always add?
The effect — never just name the choice.
Example of a structural choice?
Chronological order vs beginning at the end and working backwards.
Example of a perspective choice?
First-person vs omniscient vs unreliable vs multiple voices.
Example of a form choice?
A tight sonnet vs a sprawling novel.
Which criterion does this serve?
B1 — analysis of authorial choices (and B2 to compare them).
‘Architecture, not bricks’ means?
Compare whole-work design, not only line-level devices.
A genre choice to compare?
How each work uses or bends its genre's conventions (tragedy, satire…).
Common missed opportunity?
Only comparing small devices, never the big structural choices.
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What must a Paper 2 intro contain?
Both works (titles/authors), the question's idea, and a comparative thesis.
How should the conclusion differ from the intro?
It draws the comparison together and adds a ‘so what?’ — not a repeat.
What must neither end do?
Summarise the plots.
The intro's most important sentence?
The comparative thesis.
The conclusion's payoff?
What the comparison reveals about the works or the theme.
Which criterion does the frame support?
C — a focused comparative argument.
Should the conclusion add a new point?
No — draw existing points together instead.
How should you name the works?
By title and author, in the introduction.
Common weak conclusion?
Repeating the intro or summarising the plots.
The frame in one line?
Intro: both works + thesis. Conclusion: reworded thesis + draw together + so what.
Topic 4.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Writing the essay
English A Lang & Lit exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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