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Aspects of tragedy
Aspects of tragedy sits within Paper 1 Literary genres for AQA A-Level English Literature B 7717. It brings together Tragic protagonists, villains and victims, Tragic settings, structure and plotting, Tragic language and audience response, Shakespeare tragedy choices, The Great Gatsby, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Keats tragedy poems, Death of a Salesman, Richard II, AQA tragedy poetry anthology, so revision should move from accurate terminology to a clear literary argument rather than treating each idea as an isolated definition. Start with the wording of the learning objective, select concise textual evidence, and explain how language, form and structure shape meaning. Use AO3 only when a relevant context changes the significance of the detail, use AO4 for meaningful connections where comparison is required, and use AO5 to test an interpretation rather than to list critics. Keep genre, context, theory and personal response distinct: each can strengthen an argument, but none replaces close reading. For assessment preparation, practise making a claim, supporting it with evidence, and then evaluating how far an alternative reading changes the conclusion. This overview is designed to guide students towards the specific demands of Aspects of tragedy while remaining inside the approved 7717 curriculum.
25
Objectives
6
Flashcards
5
Questions
50 min
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Tragic protagonists, villains and victims0 objectives
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Tragic settings, structure and plotting0 objectives
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Tragic language and audience response0 objectives
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Shakespeare tragedy choices0 objectives
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The Great Gatsby0 objectives
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Tess of the D'Urbervilles0 objectives
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Keats tragedy poems0 objectives
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Death of a Salesman0 objectives
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Richard II0 objectives
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AQA tragedy poetry anthology0 objectives
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Key terms
Exam tips
- Tragic protagonists, villains and victims A-Level Literature exam tip 1: Open with a debatable literary argument, not a plot summary. Apply this to analyse how a tragic protagonist is flawed, suffers and causes suffering to others..
- Tragic protagonists, villains and victims A-Level Literature exam tip 1: Open with a debatable literary argument, not a plot summary. Apply this to explore the interplay between villains and victims in tragic texts..
Common mistakes
- Tragic protagonists, villains and victims 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.
- Tragic protagonists, villains and victims 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.
Practice preview
- Practice practice 1 — Analyse how a tragic protagonist is flawed, suffers and causes suffering to others.: which method best develops an evidence-led argument for Tragic protagonists, villains and victims? Focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression.
- Practice practice 2 — Analyse how a tragic protagonist is flawed, suffers and causes suffering to others.: which approach uses genre most accurately when answering on Aspects of tragedy? Focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression.
- Which response handles literary context correctly for Tragic protagonists, villains and victims? Focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression.
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