CCEA • English Literature
Latest uploads for English Literature at CCEA. Looking for English Literature notes at CCEA? We have lots of notes, study guides and revision notes available for English Literature at CCEA.
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Modules English Literature at CCEA
Notes available for the following courses of English Literature at CCEA
Popular books CCEA • English Literature
Latest notes & summaries CCEA • English Literature
An extensive list of quotations from “The Scarlet Letter”, covering all major characters and symbols. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for New Orleans, with analysis, in “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive analysis, from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for all characters from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for Harold Mitchell, with analysis, from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for Stella Kowalski, with analysis, from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for Stanley Kowalski, with analysis, from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
An extensive list of quotations for Blanche du Bois, with analysis, from “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Designed for A Level English Literature.
Exploration of marriage in Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë. This is a novel driven by two major themes: marriage and violence. The combination of these occurs regularly within the story, and it has been argued that Brontë always presents love and marriage as related to violence. This essay takes marriages and relationships from throughout the entire novel and examines them in depth with a focus on whether they are always presented as violent.
A 'foil' is a literary technique wherein a character has a contrasting opposite. This is a method clearly applicable to Edgar Linton and Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights, where the two characters are presented as almost exact opposites in every regard. This essay provides social and historical context, along with an analysis of literary techniques used to present the characters as foils within the narrative.