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  1. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    Advanced English Advice Please...

    Discussion in 'The Lounge' started by FantasyWitch, Jun 11, 2008.

    Hia folks :D

    I am doing Advanced Higher English. I am also one of the youngest ever to do the course in Scotland *awaits applause*

    But the Advanced course is really daunting.
    What i would like advice on is the first part of the course- the personal study.
    I have done personal book studies before, but this is to a completly diffrent level and i have no idea what i want to study.

    It is a comparison/discussion of 3 books, 3 plays or 3 poems, or a mixture of genres. 2000-4000 words.

    I was planning on doing Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess" as my first piece as I love his poetry and it's a great example of dramatic monologue. I was going to compare this to two other dramatic monologues (which ones i have no clue :p ) and discusss how effective the technique of dramatic monologue is in conveying the mind of a character, moreso than say third person poetry (i doubt that is the right term)

    But i would like to see if anyone can give me advice on any other sets of texts I could do, it doesn't have to be of the same author.
     
  2. Cogito

    Cogito Former Mod, Retired Supporter Contributor

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    I don't have specific pieces to suggest, but probably what you should look for is three works with a similar theme or purpose, and compare and contrast the ways that the different authors approach that theme.

    Similarly, you could write about how three different works portray female lead characters on their own (for example).

    The key is to choose the three pieces in light of some commonality you want to center your discussion around.

    I hope this helps.
     
  3. Banzai

    Banzai One-time Mod, but on the road to recovery Contributor

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    Good choice! Robert Browning is a genius :D

    I'm not too keen on that particular poem (bad experiences at GCSE) but if you have a few weeks, you might want to check out Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.

    Anyway, on topic, I had to do a similar thing as part of the IB- a 4000 word extended essay, on any subject I was studying, and on anything I wanted within that subject. The sheer scope of choice daunted me for a long time.

    Anyway, interesting works I would suggest:

    Poems
    The Wasteland by TS Eliot (a great poem, but a bit confusing at times)
    The Second Coming by WB Yeats
    The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe

    Books
    Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad (which has the added bonus of being quite short...).
    1984 by George Orwell (even if you don't choose it, you should read it).
    Lord of the Flies by William Golding
    To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

    Plays
    Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett
    Macbeth/Hamlet/Othello/Henry V by William Shakespeare
    The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
    Antigone by Jean Anouilh


    That's all I can think of for the time being.
     
  4. Cogito

    Cogito Former Mod, Retired Supporter Contributor

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    Also, given the length of the study, you probably don't want to compare and contrast works that are too short.
     
  5. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    Yeah :p
    Thank you!
     
  6. lessa

    lessa New Member

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    I can give you the applause and do so willingly.

    The help is beyond me but I will be part of the rooting for you crowd.
     
  7. NaCl

    NaCl Contributor Contributor

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    Applause duly presented!

    Two of my daughters were in Advanced Placement college English during high school and they were never subjected to such rigorous academic standards. I find your schooling impressive and I wish more US schools would return to the "days of expectation", when teens were respected for their inherent capabilities and challenged to excel.

    Sorry I have else nothing to offer but praise and recognition. Good luck...somehow, I don't think you need it. LOL!

    .....NaCl
     
  8. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    Oh thank you all! :D
     
  9. Eoz Eanj

    Eoz Eanj Contributor Contributor

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    Lol, i've no idea why my post is entitled with a sad face

    anyway

    3 books, 3 plays or 3 poems, or a mixture of genres. 2000-4000 words

    Some of my suggestions, having studied them at university-

    Books

    Hard Times- Charles Dickens
    This way for the gas ladies and gentlemen- Tadeusz Borowski
    To the Lighthouse- Virginia Woolf
    Frankenstein- Mary Shelley (I highly reccomend this one, it's an extremely interesting novel to study)
    The Handmaid's Tale- Margaret Atwood
    Sophie's World- Jostein Gaarder

    Plays

    Twelfth Night/Much ado about nothing/Macbeth- Shakespeare

    Poems

    The Eemis Stane- Hugh Macdiarmid
    Dulce et Decorum Est- Wilfred Owen
    Mental Cases- Wilfred Owen
    The Love Song of J.Alfred Prufrock- T.S Eliot
    Sonnet 19 (When I consider how my light is spent) - John Milton
    Easter 1916- W.E Yeats
     
  10. Banzai

    Banzai One-time Mod, but on the road to recovery Contributor

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    You could always do Paradise Lost...

    Or The Divine Comedy :D That could count as three, if you take the sections individually.
     
  11. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    Lol.

    What i am considering, after reading all your advice is to compare the diffrent ways evil is discusssed in three diffrent authors eyes.
    "My Last Duchess" by Robert Browning will probably be one becuase I already know it so well and enjoy a good dramatic monologue.
    "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee I read a few years back for standard grade and loved, I think the idea of evil there is more subtle and might be interesting to look for.
    And I'm lost for a last text. I could study the character of Sauran in LotRs, but that could be too much compared to the other two pieces.
    Any ideas for evil? Can be of any genre now I think I have two!
     
  12. Eoz Eanj

    Eoz Eanj Contributor Contributor

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    Don't do to Kill a Mockingbird, it's overkill, do something that'll challenge you.

    I suggest A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess, if you can figure that text out you'll well impress.
     
  13. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    Never read it. But I'll give it a go.
     
  14. Banzai

    Banzai One-time Mod, but on the road to recovery Contributor

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    It's more terrifying than the film...
     
  15. Kit

    Kit Contributor Contributor

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    Wow, I don't have much advice to give you but i'm definitely impressed with the english skills there. I stopped doing literature at GCSE even though I got an A* because I didn't like the look of the A level syllabus. My friend does English Literature though and they spent almost a year studying Harry Potter and Tom Brown's schooldays or something like that...

    I did read My Last Duchess at GCSE, but i'm not a huge lover of poetry anyway... it never seems to make sense or speak to me in the way it does other people.
     
  16. FantasyWitch

    FantasyWitch New Member

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    I like character complexity. Robert Browning does that well.
     

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