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NotesItalian B HLTopic 2Language for literary discussion
Back to Italian B HL Topics
2.34 min read

Language for literary discussion

IB Italian B • Unit 8

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Contents

  • Why precise language matters
  • Phrases to describe
  • Phrases to interpret
  • Phrases for personal response
  • Pitfalls & power structures
The oral rewards how you say it: At HL only, your literary individual oral and your written literary responses aren't graded on the plot you remember — they're graded on whether you can describe, interpret and respond to the work in precise, analytical Italian. The same idea sounds basic or sophisticated depending on the language you reach for. This micro gives you a phrase bank for talking about literature like a strong candidate.
Three things you always do: Almost every good comment in a literary oral does one of three jobs. You'll get a phrase bank for each in the next three sections.

Descrivere

  • l'autore mostra… / la scena rappresenta…
  • say what is on the page, neutrally

Interpretare

  • questo suggerisce che… / simboleggia…
  • say what it means beyond the surface

Reagire

  • secondo me… / trovo che…
  • say what YOU think and feel about it
Same scene, two levels of Italian: Compare:

Basic: «La donna guarda la neve ed è triste.» (The woman looks at the snow and is sad.)

Analytical: «L'autore mostra Marta alla finestra; la neve simboleggia l'oblio, e questo suggerisce che lei lotta per non dimenticare suo fratello.» (The author shows Marta at the window; the snow symbolises forgetting, and this suggests she is fighting not to forget her brother.)
Describe → interpret → respond: A strong answer rarely stops at description. The pattern that scores is: describe what happens, interpret what it means, then add your response. Learn one reliable phrase from each bank and you can build that pattern every time.
Describing = saying what is on the page: Description is your starting point: you name what the author does, what a character does, what a scene shows — neutrally, before you interpret it. These verbs in the present tense are the standard way to talk about a text («l'autore mostra…», not «l'autore mostrava…»).

L'autore / l'opera

  • l'autore mostra…
  • l'autrice descrive…
  • l'opera parla di…
  • il testo racconta…

La scena / il momento

  • la scena rappresenta…
  • in questo passaggio…
  • all'inizio… / alla fine…
  • l'atmosfera è…

Il personaggio

  • il personaggio prova…
  • il protagonista decide di…
  • il narratore ci dice che…
  • … è descritto/a come…
Present tense for the text: We talk about what a text does in the present: «l'autore mostra», «la scena rappresenta», «Marta guarda la neve» — even though you read it in the past. This is the literary present (il presente storico), and it's expected in the oral.

Verbs you'll reuse to describe

  • mostrare / rappresentare — to show / to depict
  • descrivere / raccontare — to describe / to narrate
  • parlare di / trattare di — to be about / to deal with
  • riflettere / rispecchiare — to reflect (a feeling, a reality)
Don't get stuck on description: Description is necessary but it doesn't earn the top marks on its own. Use one describing phrase to set up the detail, then move straight into interpretation — that's the next section.

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Interpreting = saying what it means: Interpretation is where the marks are. After you describe a detail, you say what it means beneath the surface — the theme, the symbol, the effect. These are the phrases that turn a comment into analysis. Read this short ORIGINAL extract, then watch how each phrase is used.
Estratto — «La neve»: Marta appoggiò la fronte al vetro e guardò la neve cadere sul cortile. Non nevicava così da quando suo fratello se n'era andato. «La neve cancella tutto», pensò, «tranne ciò che vogliamo ricordare». Chiuse la finestra, ma il freddo era già in casa, e dentro di lei.

Suggerire / significare

  • questo suggerisce che…
  • si può interpretare come…
  • questo riflette…
  • il che significa che…

Simbolismo

  • la neve simboleggia…
  • è una metafora di…
  • rappresenta / sta per…
  • l'autore usa … per…

Effetto

  • questo crea un senso di…
  • l'effetto è che…
  • questo mette in risalto…
  • questo lascia intendere che…

IB-style task — descrivere e poi interpretare

Dalla descrizione all'interpretazione

  1. Describe first. «L'autore mostra Marta mentre guarda la neve cadere sul cortile.» — neutral, just what is on the page.
  2. Then interpret with a phrase. «La neve simboleggia l'oblio, e questo suggerisce che Marta lotta per non dimenticare suo fratello.» — «simboleggia» + «questo suggerisce che» turn the detail into meaning.
  3. Name the effect. «Il contrasto tra la neve che «cancella tutto» e il ricordo di Marta crea un senso di perdita.» — «crea un senso di» states the effect on the reader.
Always link the phrase to a detail: «Questo suggerisce che…» on its own is empty — the «questo» must point at a specific quotation or detail. The winning shape is detail → interpreting phrase → meaning: name it, quote it, then say what it means.
Personal response = saying what YOU think: After describing and interpreting, a strong candidate adds a personal response: what you think, what struck you, how it made you feel — always justified by the text, never just «mi piace». These phrases let you give an opinion in mature, literary Italian.

Esprimere un'opinione

  • secondo me…
  • trovo che…
  • a mio parere…
  • dal mio punto di vista…

Reagire

  • ciò che mi colpisce di più è…
  • mi impressiona che…
  • trovo commovente quando…
  • ciò che mi piace di più è come…

Valutare

  • la cosa più riuscita, secondo me, è…
  • per me il momento chiave è…
  • mi identifico con … perché…
  • questo mi fa pensare a…
Justify every opinion: An opinion only scores when it's anchored in the text: «Ciò che mi colpisce di più è la frase «la neve cancella tutto», perché mostra che Marta teme l'oblio.» The «perché…» (because…) is what turns a feeling into analysis. Reach for a specific line, then justify.
Avoid the empty «mi piace»: «Il libro mi piace» says nothing. Reach for «trovo il romanzo commovente perché…» or «ciò che mi colpisce di più è…». A justified personal response is a sign of a top candidate.

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Plain summary vs analytical language: The single biggest trap is describing in plain narrative language instead of analysing. Two more structures separate strong candidates: the congiuntivo for nuanced, hedged opinions and the passive (il passivo / si passivante) for talking about how a text is constructed. Compare the habits that score with the ones that don't.

Fai così (do)

  • L'autore usa la neve per simboleggiare l'oblio.
  • Questo suggerisce che Marta teme l'oblio.
  • Si potrebbe interpretare come una storia malinconica.
  • La solitudine è rappresentata dalla finestra chiusa.

Evita (avoid)

  • La neve cade e la donna è triste. (solo trama)
  • Succede questo, poi questo, poi questo.
  • È solo triste. (senza motivazione)
  • Il libro mi piace. È bello. (senza prove)
Power structure 1 — il congiuntivo: The congiuntivo softens an opinion and sounds mature and tentative:

• «Direi che il tema centrale è la memoria.» (I would say the central theme is memory.)

• «Si potrebbe interpretare come una critica sociale.» (One could read it as social criticism.)

• «Credo che questa scena sia la più intensa.» (I believe this scene is the most intense — «sia», congiuntivo, after «credo che».)
Power structure 2 — il passivo: The passive lets you talk about how the text is constructed without naming an agent — a hallmark of literary analysis:

• «La solitudine è rappresentata dalla finestra chiusa.» (Loneliness is depicted through the closed window.)

• «La neve viene usata come simbolo dell'oblio.» (The snow is used as a symbol of forgetting.)

Form: «essere / venire» + past participle (participio passato), agreeing with the subject.
Narrator ≠ author: When you describe a first-person novel, the «io» is the narratore (narrator), a character — not the autore, the real writer. «L'autore dice io» is a classic slip; say «il narratore in prima persona» (the first-person narrator).

IB Exam Questions on Language for literary discussion

Practice with IB-style questions filtered to Topic 2.3. Get instant AI feedback on every answer.

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How Language for literary discussion Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Language for literary discussion.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Language for literary discussion.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within Language for literary discussion.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Language for literary discussion.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide →

Related Italian B HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

1.1Reading a literary work
1.2Themes and characters
1.3Narrative voice and style
2.1Analysing a literary extract
View all Italian B HL topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Italian B HL

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