Using quotations and close analysis
To support your points, you need to use quotations and examples. Quotations should be kept short and to the point. Using just a few words is more powerful than copying out chunks of text: it shows you are being selective. You should also be careful to copy accurately.
Put the quotation inside your own sentence, rather than putting it in the middle of a page and then commenting on it. This is called embedding a quotation.
So rather than:
"He flew like a butterfly." This is an example of a simile, which shows that he was light and graceful.
Or:
The author uses similes, eg "he flew like a butterfly."
You would write:
The author uses the simile of the boy flying "like a butterfly" to convey the impression that he is light and graceful.
The words from the text are embedded as part of your sentence 鈥 they make sense as a whole.
Making the most of quotations
A close analysisThe interpretation of a piece of text which looks closely at the language, structure and themes used. of the language in the quotation can be used to support your point.
There are several ways you can do this:
- Focus on a word from the quotation and write about why it was chosen by the writer.
- Write about the connotationAn idea or image which is suggested by a word, which is not its dictionary meaning, eg the connotation of 'desk' might be school. of the word, eg the word 鈥榮nake鈥 could have connotations of evil and might be used to create an ominousSuggestive of danger to come. atmosphere.
- The context of a word will also be important when you are analysing its effect. How the word is used in the sentence and paragraph may affect the connotations of that word.
- The quotation may contain a metaphorA comparison made without using 'like' or 'as', eg 'sea of troubles' and 'drowning in debt'., simileA comparison using 'like' or 'as' to create a vivid image, eg as big as a whale; float like a butterfly, sting like a bee., or other language technique 鈥 what is the effect of the technique?
- Make sure you name the literary technique as part of your analysis.
- Remember that you don鈥檛 need to give a definition of the technique (just focus on the effect).
- Do the language choices in the quotation link to other parts of the extract? Can you see a pattern in the way the writer is using language?
- What is the reader鈥檚 response to the language in the quotation?