AQA • English Literature B
Latest uploads for English Literature B at AQA. Looking for English Literature B notes at AQA? We have lots of notes, study guides and revision notes available for English Literature B at AQA.
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Modules English Literature B at AQA
Notes available for the following courses of English Literature B at AQA
Popular books AQA • English Literature B
William Shakespeare • ISBN 9781853260186
Tennessee Williams • ISBN 9780811216029
Ian McEwan • ISBN 9780099429791
William Shakespeare • ISBN 9781909621862
Khaled Hosseini, Ehab Abdel Hamid • ISBN 9781526604736
Kate Atkinson, Kate Atkinson • ISBN 9781409093671
Arthur Miller • ISBN 9780141182742
Carol Duffy • ISBN 9780571211302
William Blake, William Blake • ISBN 9780241303054
Carol Ann Duffy • ISBN 9781509852666
Samuel Taylor Coleridge • ISBN 9780486272665
William Shakespeare, William Shakespeare • ISBN 9781903436592
Carol Ann Duffy, Carol Ann Duffy • ISBN 9781447275251
Latest notes & summaries AQA • English Literature B
A full mark A* example essay which explores whether Moira's resistance was futile or heroic in 'The Handmaid's Tale'. A-level English Literature, social and political protest writing.
This is a full mark A* English literature A-level essay. It explores how William Blake navigates social and political constraints in his poetry, specifically looking at his 'Songs of Experience'
A complete synopsis of King Lear containing key quotes along with an in-depth technical analysis of literary techniques used by Shakespeare. 
A* level/rare analysis. Very thorough summary.
A Level exam notes with some indicative content provided for certain of the questions "Frankenstein"
Act by act, scene by scene summary of Othello by Shakespeare, Death of a salesman by Arthur Miller and Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy. Including important quotes, authorial methods, symbols and themes.
This is a thorough, reviewed and edited essay exploring in depth the significance of the key theme, guilt, in the novel Atonement by Ian McEwan.
In ‘Atonement’, criminals get away with their crimes’. 
 
To what extent do you agree? 
 
I scored an A* on this essay.
I wrote this essay on Paul Marshall and his position as the actual criminal within the text. I got an A* on this essay.
‘As far as the reader is concerned, Briony never succeeds in atoning for her crime in spite of all her efforts’. To what extent do you agree with this view? I scored an A* on this essay.
‘Atonement offers us no heroes or villains – only victims’. To what extent do you agree with this view? I scored an A* on this essay.