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Learning objective

Analyse jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict.

Read the explanation, check the common trap, then practise with flashcards and questions.

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Topic

Historicist study of love

Subtopic

Emotional conflict and development

Aqa A Level English Literature APaper 1 Love through the ages

Study support

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Quick explanation

Analyse jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict

  • This point belongs to Historicist study of love, especially Emotional conflict and development.
  • You need to be able to analyse jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict.
  • The key ideas to know are jealousy, deception, and guilt.
  • Use the linked flashcards and practice questions to check recall, then practise applying the idea in an exam-style answer.

Key concepts

jealousydeceptionguilt

Why it matters

This objective helps connect Emotional conflict and development to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Historicist study of love.

Quick student answer

How do you build a Literature answer on jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict?

Direct answer

For English Literature, this page helps you practise jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict in Historicist study of love. Focus on the writer's methods, relevant quotations, context where it matters, and a clear line of analysis. Key terms to check are jealousy and guilt.

Key terms

  • jealousy: jealousy is a literary concept used to frame the approved objective "Analyse jealousy, guilt, truth and deception as sources of emotional conflict.". Define it precisely, then connect it to textual evidence and a writer's choice in language, form or structure rather than using it as a topic label.
  • guilt: guilt is an interpretive or assessment boundary for Emotional conflict and development. Use it to distinguish connected comparison from separate essays, literary context from biography, or evidence-supported interpretation from unsupported opinion as the objective requires.

Common trap

Emotional conflict and development literary-analysis mistake 1: Make an AO1 claim, use accurate textual evidence, analyse a method for AO2, add relevant AO3 context, connect texts for AO4 and test interpretations for AO5 only where the task requires them.

Related questions

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