At the exam, you can get a text within the following themes:
1. American Rhetoric (study the forms of appeal, all the rhetorical features we have talked about such as anaphora, antithesis, sponsorship effect, the rhetorical pentagram....)
2. The Power of Language, the Language of Power (study power relations, the British Empire, The Empire Writes Back, the rhetorical pentagram - always useful in non fiction, tools for analysing short stories, tools for analysing poetry)
3. Romanticism (study the language ideals of poetry and the role of the poet, study Poe - i believe i mentioned this before!!!, the gothic - distiguish between America and Britain, tools for analysing poetry, tools fro analysing short stories - I believe I have mentioned reliability of 1st person narrators!
4. Women writing Women, 19th century fiction (study tools for analysing short stories, gender roles in the Victorian age, women's rights, The Angel of the House, authors we worked on)
5. Macbeth (study everything you can get your hands on regarding the play and Shakespeare. Make sure you know the story and the development of the characters, study Shakespeare's use of language)
You are expected to know your CURRICULUM and be able to put your text into a relevant literary, thematic, and historical perspective. You are allowed to refer to works studied last year, but it is not a requirement.
Read aloud, SPEAK English, look at areas of grammar that tend to be problemtic for you. Look up relevant vocabulary and learn new words. Do not underestimate the importance of preparation since your language will be an important part of your evaluation/grade.
The first 10 minutes of the exam are yours - make sure you have a GOOD structure. This is your time to shine and you must make sure that you present all your sharp observations.
DO NOT forget to present your text - genre, author, title, period!