2.1 Novel Study – Practise Paper

Completing practise papers is a core element of preparation for final exams. Write them in one session, under timed conditions (90 minutes) and by hand. If you scan or photograph your paper and upload it to your blog I will be notified and give feedback.

Practise Question

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Excellence Exemplar

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Marking Rubric

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The Book Thief: Literary Devices

Practice Introduction

Analyse how supposedly insignificant events or details revealed one or more significant themes.

“The secret sat in her mouth. It made itself comfortable. It crossed its legs” In his novel, “The Book Thief”, Markus Zusak leverages seemingly insignificant details to convey his deepest themes. Typical of the genre of Magical Realism, where otherwise realistic situations are suffused with a layer of the impossible, the power of words and language is revealed to us in this novel via the personification of everyday objects like books, words, and even thoughts themselves.

Attempt 2: (essential components of an intro paragraph)

Component 1: NAME THE TEXT, THE AUTHOR, THE THEME, AND THE TECHNIQUES USED TO CONVEY THE THEME.

In his novel, “The Book Thief”, Markus Zusak communicates his ideas about the vulnerability of all societies to colluding in atrocities by re-framing the events of the Nazi Holocaust in the mid-20th century. Like many texts in the genre of Magical Realism, a variety of techniques are used by Zusak to help the reader to look at something familiar with new eyes.

Component 2: Link to the question – stating how you will answer, referring to the 3-4 points.

Component 3: Develop a structure for your essay

Body 1: Topic Statement: Zusak personifies death throughout the novel, making him the narrator, and giving him a role in the text. Quote: “I walked in, loosened his soul and carried it gently out.”

Body 2: Topic Statement: The setting is often personified as well, furthering our ‘de-familiarisation’ of the events of the Second World War, and thereby further asking us to re-examine our easy assumptions about how we would never be involved in anything so horrific. Quote: “The streets were ruptured veins. Blood streamed till it was dried on the road, and the bodies were stuck there, like driftwood after the flood.”

Body 3: Topic Statement: Sometimes Death will include the reader in the story through his use of pronouns, almost making us complicit, passive, observers to the unfolding horror of the 3rd Reich. Quote: We now know, of course, that the boy didn’t make it.”

Body 4: Topic Statement: Death’s strangely discordant perception of place – which he often also personifies, extends his naivety. We are left believing that the choice to follow Hitler is arbitrary. Quote: “She lived for her shop and her shop lived for the Third Reich.”

Posted by Christopher Waugh

“Risk! Risk anything! Care no more for the opinions of others, for those voices. Do the hardest thing on earth for you. Act for yourself. Face the truth.” (Katherine Mansfield)

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