Analysing Texts
Suggested approach to this task is S.C.A.S.I
Learn this thoroughly!
Setting / Where and when did it take place? Don’t just think physical location, although that is important too. Also consider· Social setting – how people live in that place and at that time
· Historic setting – when it happens
· Economic setting – how the characters make a living, and what larger financial forces operate
· Moral setting – what people of that time think of as ‘right’ and ‘wrong’
· Political setting – how society at large is organised and controlled
· Philosophical setting – what ideas about life people in the community, or the writer, have
Characters / Write about characters as the creations of someone’s imagination – they’re not real! They’re constructs.
Consider the following about characters:
· History
· What others say about them
· How they say it; tone of voice and use of language
· Their gestures and the way they move
· Relationships with other characters
· Appearance eg age, race, demeanour
· What they say ie the dialogue; what doe is reveal about them eg values, hopes
Also consider use of ‘persona’ – a character speaking in first person (I, me) as if he’s the writer
Action / What happens … the plot
· Nature of conflict eg external, internal
· Orientation, rising complication, climax, resolution, denouement
· Outside events that are ‘contextual’ eg already taken place, current events in society, predicted events
· Parallel plotting, linear plots, use of flashback etc
Style / How it is all communicated eg
· Genre and form of text
· Use of punctuation
· Use of imagery and symbolism
· Sentence structure – short, complicated, non-sentences, enjambment
· Tone
· Narration style – 1st, 2nd or 3rd;changes
· Figurative language eg simile, metaphor, personification
· Sounds of words eg onomatopoeia, assonance, alliteration, consonance
· Use of emotive or biased language, positive, negative or neutral
· Rhyme and rhythm
· Juxtaposition and contrast
· Allusions to other literary works, characters, myths etc
· Use of description, adjectives and appeal to senses
· Use of argument, expert opinion, statistics and facts, objective language
· Use of persuasive language – subjective language eg hyperbole, magic realism
· Use of rhetoric questions, statements, commands
· Use of humour in its various forms eg sarcasm, wit, puns, oxymorons, irony
· Think of other things that have been omitted from this list eg repetition. Your turn!!!
Ideas / The conclusions we take away with us at the end.
· Ideas through a longer piece of writing become themes
· Lots of ideas can branch out from one main one.
· All events, all situations have ideas attached to them