A Level English Literature CCEA

This subject offers 206 topics in 22 modules:

  1. A Streetcar Named Desire 6 topics
  2. As You Like It 6 topics
  3. A Thousand Splendid Suns 6 topics
  4. Chaucer: Pre-1900 Poetry 3 topics
  5. Dracula 6 topics
  6. Emily Dickinson 20 topics
  7. Emma 6 topics
  8. Frankenstein 6 topics
  9. Frost and Heaney Anthology 22 topics
  10. John Donne: Pre-1900 Poetry 21 topics
  11. John Keats: Pre-1900 Poetry 18 topics
  12. King Lear 6 topics
  13. Measure for Measure 6 topics
  14. Othello 6 topics
  15. Silas Marner 6 topics
  16. Taming of the Shrew 6 topics
  17. The Crucible 17 topics
  18. The Scarlet Letter 6 topics
  19. The Winter's Tale 6 topics
  20. Waiting for Godot 6 topics
  21. William Blake Anthology 15 topics
  22. Wuthering Heights 6 topics
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  • 22
    modules
  • 206
    topics
  • 59,155
    words of revision content
  • 7+
    hours of audio lessons

This page was last modified on 28 September 2024.

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English Literature

A Streetcar Named Desire

A Streetcar Named Desire: Character Profiles

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A Streetcar Named Desire: Character Profiles

  • Scene 9: In Scene 9, Blanche is confronted by Mitch about the rumours of her past after he brings up her constant avoidance of light, revealing her vulnerability and insecurity.
  • Scene 10: Scene 10 is a defining moment in the play, in which Stanley taunts and then rapes Blanche, one of the most damaging moments of her life.
  • Scene 11: In the final Scene 11, Blanche is taken away to a mental institution, symbolising her complete downfall and the result of the fragility of her mental state.
  • Blanche: Blanche DuBois is a fading Southern belle whose past haunts her present, leading her to alcoholism and promiscuity, culminating in her mental breakdown.
  • Stanley: Stanley Kowalski is a brutish, dominating spouse who values physical strength and sexual prowess, and his lack of sympathy towards Blanche's vulnerability leads to her downfall.
  • Stella: Stella Kowalski, Stanley’s wife and Blanche’s sister, is torn between her loyalty to her husband and her responsibilities to her sister, highlighting domestic conflicts and woman submissiveness.
  • Mitch: Mitch, Stanley’s army friend and Blanche’s short-term suitor, is initially respectful and gentle towards Blanche but leaves her upon discovering her past, showcasing societal judgement.
  • Eunice: Eunice, Stella's loyal friend, and Stanley's neighbour serves as a foil character, embodying the harsh realities of lower-class life.
  • Allan Grey: Allan Grey, Blanche's deceased husband, who committed suicide after Blanche discovered his homosexuality, reveals the traumatic roots of Blanche's mental instability.
  • Shep Huntleigh: Shep Huntleigh is an unseen character who represents Blanche's fantasy of escaping from her troubled life and embarking on a dream life of wealth and luxury.
  • Steve: Steve is Stanley's loyal friend and Eunice's husband, symbolising the average man in the lower social class, crude and insensitive to the feelings of women.
  • Pablo: Pablo, another of Stanley's friends, largely blends into the background highlighting the collective identity of Stanley's group.
  • Other Characters: Other characters represent a range of social statuses and interests, auxiliary to the main characters' dynamics but important in the development of setting, theme, and conflict.

Course material for English Literature, module A Streetcar Named Desire, topic A Streetcar Named Desire: Character Profiles

English Literature

John Keats: Pre-1900 Poetry

La Belle Dame sans Merci

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La Belle Dame sans Merci

  • Plot: The poem tells the tale of a knight who encounters a captivating and seductive woman, who he later realises is a deceitful fairy creature, leaving him in a wretched state of despair and alienation.
  • Structure & Language Techniques: The poem follows a structure of twelve quatrains and employs language techniques such as symbolism, repetition, and mediaeval romance narrative style, creating a mysterious and suspenseful atmosphere.
  • Themes & Linking Poems: Themes include love and loss, the supernatural, and the destructive power of beauty, which can be linked to other Keatsian works like 'The Eve of St. Agnes' and 'Ode to a Nightingale.'
  • Key Quotes: Some significant quotes include "I met a lady in the meads," "I set her on my pacing steed," and "And there she lulled me asleep," reflecting the enchanting yet dangerous nature of the titular 'Belle Dame.'
  • Poet & Context: John Keats was a distinctive Romantic poet whose work often delved into the human condition, beauty, and mortality, with 'La Belle Dame sans Merci' written during a period of personal illness and romantic disappointment.

Course material for English Literature, module John Keats: Pre-1900 Poetry, topic La Belle Dame sans Merci

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