Exam-style question
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MCQ focus 1 — as a fixed or uniform viewpoint. Which approach keeps the relevant literary boundaries clear when addressing Compare continuities and differences without treating one period as a fixed or uniform viewpoint?.
- A.Make a focused claim about Compare continuities and differences without treating one period as a fixed or uniform viewpoint., support it with accurate textual evidence, and analyse how language, form or structure shapes meaning.
- B.Retell events in order and leave the evidence unexplained.
- C.Invent a memorable quotation so the paragraph sounds precise.
- D.Name several methods without explaining their literary effect.
Model answer
What a good answer should say
- The correct answer is Make a focused claim about Compare continuities and differences without treating one period as a fixed or uniform viewpoint., support it with accurate textual evidence, and analyse how language, form or structure shapes meaning.
Explanation
Why this works
The marked option is strongest because it answers the specific Love across time requirement through evidence-led literary reasoning. The distractors weaken the response by substituting summary, feature spotting, invented evidence, option mixing or unsupported opinion for analysis.
For Historicist study of love in Paper 1 Love through the ages, the principal focus is AO2 method analysis, AO3 historicist significance, AO4 textual connections. To compare continuities and differences without treating one period as a fixed or uniform viewpoint, the student must keep the answer anchored to the approved text or supplied passage and make each analytical step explicit.
The official central-theme component explores changing representations of love across literary periods, genres and individual lives. Keep the Love across time strand explicit so the reasoning cannot be transferred unchanged to another 7712 topic.
Keep context distinct from biography, comparison distinct from separate essays, and AO3 context distinct from AO5 interpretation.
Common mistake
No common mistake is linked to this question yet.
