A Level English Literature WJEC

This subject offers 360 topics in 22 modules:

  1. A Streetcar Named Desire 6 topics
  2. The Mayor of Casterbridge 24 topics
  3. William Blake, Poems selected by Patti Smith 20 topics
  4. A Thousand Splendid Suns 6 topics
  5. Chaucer: Poetry Pre-1900 3 topics
  6. Christina Rossetti: Poetry Pre-1900 30 topics
  7. Dr Faustus 6 topics
  8. Hamlet 20 topics
  9. Jane Eyre 6 topics
  10. John Donne: Poetry Pre-1900 44 topics
  11. John Keats: Poetry Pre-1900 16 topics
  12. King Lear 21 topics
  13. Larkin and Duffy 23 topics
  14. Loot 6 topics
  15. Milton 2 topics
  16. Seamus Heaney and Owen Sheers 20 topics
  17. Sense and Sensibility 6 topics
  18. Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath 26 topics
  19. The Duchess of Malfi 20 topics
  20. The Tempest 20 topics
  21. Unseen Poetry 15 topics
  22. Unseen Prose 20 topics
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  • 22
    modules
  • 360
    topics
  • 111,565
    words of revision content
  • 14+
    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

  • Blanche: A neurotic, delusional former school teacher who is haunted by her past and relies on the kindness of strangers for her survival.
  • Stanley: A brutish and crude working-class man, whose animalistic nature and suspicion lead to a confrontation with Blanche.
  • Stella: Stanley's wife and Blanche's younger sister, who is torn between loyalty to her husband and compassion for her sister.
  • Mitch: A potential love interest for Blanche, that represents an escape from her past, but becomes disillusioned when faced with her reality.
  • Eunice: Upstairs neighbour to Stella and Stanley, she represents the enduring, pragmatic face of womanhood who tolerates her husband's flaws for the sake of family stability.
  • Allan Grey: Blanche's dead husband, whose premature death after confessing his homosexuality precipitates Blanche’s mental breakdown.
  • Shep Huntleigh: An unseen character who symbolises Blanche's aspirations for a better life, but eventually his lack of existence indicates Blanche's detachment from reality.
  • Steve: Stanley's poker buddy, represents the stereotypical macho man of the era with similar violent and misogynistic tendencies but less charisma.
  • Pablo: Another of Stanley's poker buddies whose presence amplifies the themes of masculinity and male-dominance in the play.
  • Other Characters: Complement the main characters, adding depth to the storyline and contributing to establishing the social setting and its atmosphere.

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

English Literature

John Keats: Poetry Pre-1900

When I have fears that I may cease to be

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When I have fears that I may cease to be

  • Plot: The poem portrays the speaker's fear of dying before he is able to write out all of his thoughts and ideas, highlighting the fleeting nature of life.
  • Structure & Language Techniques: Utilizing the Shakespearean sonnet structure, Keats employs a rich variety of poetic techniques include vivid imagery, simile, personification and enjambment to underscore his fears and hopes.
  • Themes & Linking Poems: Keats explores the themes of mortality, the passage of time, fear and love which can be linked to other poems such as Ode to a Nightingale and To Autumn.
  • Key Quotes: "When I behold, upon the night's starred face," and "And think that I may never live to trace," highlight the poet's sense of mortality and missed opportunities.
  • Poet & Context: John Keats, a significant figure of the Romantic period, wrote this poem as he was battling tuberculosis, providing a poignant context to his fears and the impermanence explored in the poem.

Course material for English Literature, module John Keats: Poetry Pre-1900, topic When I have fears that I may cease to be

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