Independent Literary Commentary & Comparative Analysis

Master the art of unseen text analysis. Learn to construct a perceptive, evaluative commentary using critical lenses, and develop comparative analysis skills for the eAssessment.

What You'll Learn

  • Write an independent literary commentary without supporting materials
  • Apply critical lenses (feminist, postcolonial, Marxist, psychoanalytic) to interpret texts
  • Analyse language choices, structure, and literary techniques with precision
  • Construct comparative analysis linking two or more texts thematically and stylistically
  • Develop original, evaluative insights that go beyond surface-level reading
  • Structure responses for maximum impact under timed eAssessment conditions

eAssessment Focus

Criterion A (Analysing): Analyse content, context, language, structure, technique, and style of text(s) and the relationships between texts.

Criterion B (Organising): Organise opinions and ideas in a sustained, coherent, and logical manner.

Criterion C (Producing Text): Produce texts that demonstrate insight, imagination, and sensitivity while exploring and reflecting on new perspectives.

Format: ~2 hours, no notes. Part 1: unseen text analysis. Part 2: extended writing in a specified form.

Key Vocabulary

TermDefinition
Independent commentaryAnalysis of an unseen text relying entirely on your own reading — no supporting materials
Critical lensA theoretical framework (feminist, postcolonial, psychoanalytic, Marxist) used to reveal power structures or ideological assumptions
Postcolonial readingExamining a text for representations of colonial power, race, and cultural identity
Feminist readingExamining a text for representations of gender, power, and patriarchy
SyntaxThe arrangement of words in a sentence; complex syntax can reflect complex thought or emotion
AmbiguityA text element open to more than one interpretation, creating richness and complexity
Thematic convergenceThe way multiple themes in a text reinforce or complicate each other
Comparative analysisAn examination of how two or more texts relate through shared themes, techniques, or contrasting approaches
Golden Rule: In eAssessment text analysis, never retell the passage. The examiner knows what it says. Every sentence you write must be analytical or evaluative — what it means, how it works, and why it matters.

High-Level Commentary Structure

A Grade 10 commentary must be systematic and purposeful. Follow this structure to ensure every paragraph earns marks.

The Seven-Step Framework

  1. Contextualise — Briefly place the passage in its context (genre, period, narrative position). Do NOT retell.
  2. Open with a central argument — What is this passage doing? What is its purpose? State your thesis clearly.
  3. Analyse language — Identify specific word choices, connotations, imagery, and figurative language. Always quote and interpret.
  4. Analyse structure — How is the passage organised? Consider syntax, sentence length, paragraph breaks, pacing, and narrative perspective.
  5. Analyse technique — Name specific literary devices (metaphor, irony, juxtaposition, enjambment) and evaluate their effect.
  6. Relate to the whole text or broader context — Connect to the text's themes, cultural moment, or a critical lens.
  7. Close with an evaluative, original insight — Offer a considered interpretive claim, not a summary.

Command Terms for eAssessment

Command TermWhat It RequiresKey Difference
AnalyseExamine in detail; interpret to reach conclusionsMust go beyond description to interpretation
EvaluateWeigh strengths AND limitations; justified conclusionRequires balanced judgment, not one-sided opinion
SynthesiseCombine information from multiple sources for new understandingCreates connections across texts or perspectives
JustifySupport a conclusion with evidence and reasoningEvidence must directly support the claim

What Separates a Good Commentary from a Great One

Good (5–6)

  • Identifies techniques correctly
  • Uses relevant quotations
  • Makes some analytical points
  • Organised structure

Great (7–8)

  • Interprets WHY techniques are used and their effect
  • Embeds quotations seamlessly
  • Offers original, evaluative insights
  • Applies a critical lens with sophistication
  • Shows awareness of ambiguity and multiple readings
eAssessment Tip: Time yourself. In ~2 hours, you need to read the unseen text carefully (10–15 min), plan your response (5–10 min), write the commentary (40–50 min), and complete Part 2. Practise under these conditions regularly.

Critical Lenses

A critical lens is a theoretical framework that shapes how you read a text. Each lens reveals different power structures, assumptions, and meanings within the same passage.

Four Core Critical Lenses

LensFocusKey Questions to Ask
FeministGender, power, patriarchyHow are women represented? Who has power? How does language position gender? Are female characters active or passive?
PostcolonialRace, colonial power, cultural identityWhose perspective dominates? How is the "other" represented? Does the text challenge or reinforce colonial assumptions?
MarxistClass, economics, social hierarchyWho controls resources? How does class shape characters' choices? Does the text naturalise or critique inequality?
PsychoanalyticUnconscious desires, repression, identityWhat motivates characters beneath the surface? What is repressed? How do symbols reveal the unconscious?

Applying a Lens: Worked Method

  1. Read the text without a lens first — Understand what is happening on the surface.
  2. Select a lens — Choose the framework that reveals the most interesting tensions or patterns.
  3. Identify textual evidence — Find specific quotations that the lens illuminates.
  4. Interpret through the lens — Explain what the evidence reveals about power, identity, or ideology.
  5. Evaluate — Does the text reinforce, challenge, or complicate the structures the lens reveals?

Example: Feminist Lens Applied

In Jane Eyre, a feminist reading reveals how Brontë both challenges and operates within Victorian patriarchy. Jane's declaration — "I am no bird; and no net ensnares me" — uses the metaphor of entrapment to assert female autonomy. The image of the "net" connotes both physical and ideological constraint. Yet Jane's eventual marriage to Rochester, after he is blinded and weakened, could be read as the text requiring male disempowerment before female equality becomes possible — a qualified feminist triumph.

Critical Rule: You do not need to name the lens explicitly in every response, but your analysis should demonstrate a consistent interpretive perspective. Avoid applying a lens superficially — saying "this is a feminist reading" without showing HOW it changes interpretation earns no credit.

Analysing Language & Structure

Language analysis examines word-level choices; structure analysis examines how the text is organised. Both are essential for a high-scoring commentary.

Language Analysis: Key Elements

ElementDefinitionEffect to Discuss
DictionWord choiceConnotations, register, formality, semantic fields
ImageryLanguage creating sensory impressionsVisual, auditory, tactile — what atmosphere is created?
Figurative languageMetaphor, simile, personificationWhat comparison is being drawn and why?
ToneThe writer's attitude toward the subjectHow does tone shift? What effect does this have on the reader?
Semantic fieldA group of related wordsPatterns of meaning — e.g., a semantic field of war in a love poem

Structure Analysis: Key Elements

ElementWhat to NoticeEffect to Discuss
Sentence lengthShort vs. long; simple vs. complexShort = urgency, shock, impact. Long = reflection, complexity, flow
Paragraph/stanza breaksWhere divisions occurShifts in time, mood, perspective, or argument
Narrative perspectiveFirst person, third person, omniscientReliability, intimacy, distance, control of information
Opening and closingHow the text begins and endsCircularity, resolution, open-endedness, shock
JuxtapositionContrasting elements placed side by sideTension, irony, thematic complexity

The PEE+E Framework for Analysis

  • Point — State what technique or feature you have identified
  • Evidence — Quote precisely from the text
  • Explanation — Explain what it means and how it works
  • Evaluation — Judge its effectiveness, consider alternative interpretations, or connect to a wider theme

Example Using PEE+E

Point: The poet uses enjambment to create a sense of breathlessness.
Evidence: "I ran across the / broken field, my heart / somewhere behind me"
Explanation: The line breaks fragment the speaker's experience, mirroring the physical and emotional disorientation of flight. The heart being "somewhere behind me" personifies the organ as something left behind — suggesting emotional dissociation.
Evaluation: This technique is particularly effective because it forces the reader to experience the same fragmentation, making form and content inseparable — a hallmark of sophisticated poetry.

Comparative Analysis

Comparative analysis examines how two or more texts relate to each other through shared themes, contrasting techniques, or different cultural perspectives.

Structuring a Comparative Response

  1. Identify the basis for comparison — What connects these texts? (Theme, genre, time period, technique, perspective)
  2. Develop a thesis — Make a claim about HOW the texts relate (not just THAT they share a theme)
  3. Alternate between texts — Do not analyse Text A fully then Text B fully. Weave between them point by point.
  4. Use comparative connectives — "Similarly," "In contrast," "While Text A... Text B...," "Both texts, however..."
  5. Synthesise in your conclusion — What does the comparison reveal that studying either text alone would not?

Comparative Connectives

Showing Similarity

  • Similarly, both texts...
  • Like [Text A], [Text B] also...
  • This parallel suggests...
  • Both writers employ... to achieve...

Showing Contrast

  • In contrast, [Text B]...
  • While [Text A] uses... [Text B] instead...
  • This divergence reveals...
  • Where [Text A] affirms... [Text B] subverts...
Common Mistake: Writing two separate mini-essays about each text. A comparative analysis must be integrated — every paragraph should reference both texts and explain how they relate. The synthesis is what earns top marks.

Worked Examples

These examples demonstrate the level of analysis expected at Grade 10 eAssessment standard. Study how each response interprets, evaluates, and connects.

EXAMPLE 1Write a commentary opening for: "She walked to the window. Outside, the city burned."
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Full Solution
The brevity of this closing passage is itself a technique — the truncated sentences create a staccato rhythm that mirrors shock and emotional paralysis. The character "walks to the window," a gesture of deliberate separation: she observes rather than acts, suggesting dissociation or acceptance. The juxtaposition of the intimate, private "she" with the vast, public "the city burned" enacts the novel's central tension between the personal and the political. "Burned" is grammatically ambiguous — past tense, but present in its immediacy — suggesting both ongoing destruction and a moment already consigned to history. The final image is resolutely open: we are not told what she feels, which refuses the reader the comfort of resolution. This ending positions suffering as incomprehensible and ongoing — an ethical refusal to aestheticise or contain destruction.
EXAMPLE 2Apply a postcolonial lens to the phrase: "They brought civilisation to the dark continent."
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Full Solution
A postcolonial reading exposes the ideological violence embedded in this apparently neutral statement. "They brought" positions the colonisers as active agents of progress, while the colonised are rendered invisible — passive recipients with no culture, history, or agency of their own. The word "civilisation" functions as a value-laden binary: it implies that European culture is the standard against which all others are measured and found lacking. "Dark continent" is the most revealing phrase — "dark" operates simultaneously as a geographical descriptor (unexplored by Europeans), a racial signifier, and a moral judgment (darkness as ignorance, evil, absence). The sentence naturalises colonial violence by framing exploitation as benevolence — what postcolonial scholars call the "civilising mission" narrative. A critical reader must recognise that this language does not describe reality; it constructs a reality that justifies domination.
EXAMPLE 3Analyse how sentence structure creates meaning in: "I was tired. I was hungry. I was alone. I kept walking."
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Full Solution
The anaphoric repetition of "I was" creates a rhythmic litany of suffering — each short, declarative sentence adds another layer of deprivation. The parallel structure (subject-verb-complement) mirrors the monotony and relentlessness of the speaker's experience. The progression from physical needs ("tired," "hungry") to emotional state ("alone") suggests a deepening vulnerability. The final sentence breaks the pattern — "I kept walking" shifts from a state of being to an act of will. This structural disruption is the passage's most powerful moment: it transforms the speaker from passive sufferer to active agent. The verb "kept" implies both endurance and defiance. Structurally, the passage moves from accumulation to resolution, embodying resilience through form itself.
EXAMPLE 4Compare how two writers use nature imagery to represent emotional states.
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Full Solution
In Text A, the storm functions as a pathetic fallacy — the external weather mirrors the protagonist's internal turmoil. The "crashing waves" and "howling wind" create a semantic field of violence that externalises grief, allowing the reader to experience emotion sensorially rather than abstractly. In contrast, Text B's use of a "still, frozen lake" represents emotional numbness through absence rather than excess. Where Text A's nature is dynamic and overwhelming, Text B's is eerily static — the frozen surface suggesting emotions that are present but inaccessible, trapped beneath an impenetrable surface. Both writers use nature to make the invisible visible, but their contrasting approaches reveal fundamentally different conceptions of suffering: Text A presents grief as cathartic and expressive; Text B presents it as suppressed and isolating. This comparison illuminates how the same literary strategy — nature imagery — can serve opposing emotional purposes depending on the specific images selected.
EXAMPLE 5Apply a Marxist lens to a scene where a wealthy character gives charity to a poor character.
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Full Solution
A Marxist reading interrogates the power dynamics embedded in this apparently benevolent act. Charity, from a Marxist perspective, does not address structural inequality but reinforces it: the wealthy character's position as giver confirms their power, while the poor character's gratitude confirms their subordination. The scene naturalises class hierarchy by presenting generosity as a personal virtue rather than questioning the system that creates the need for charity in the first place. If the text frames the wealthy character sympathetically, it participates in what Marxist critics call ideology — making unequal power relations appear natural, inevitable, and even morally admirable. A critical reader should ask: does the text invite us to admire the giver, or does it expose the structural conditions that make giving necessary? The answer determines whether the text challenges or perpetuates class consciousness.
EXAMPLE 6Analyse the effect of an unreliable narrator on the reader's interpretation.
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Full Solution
An unreliable narrator forces the reader into an active, suspicious reading position. When the narrator's account contains contradictions, omissions, or self-serving distortions, the reader must distinguish between what is told and what actually happened — creating a productive gap between narration and reality. This technique is particularly effective because it makes the reader conscious of how stories are constructed: all narration involves selection, emphasis, and perspective. The unreliable narrator merely makes this process visible. In eAssessment analysis, identifying unreliability requires attention to inconsistencies (does the narrator contradict themselves?), motivation (what does the narrator gain by telling the story this way?), and gaps (what is conspicuously absent from their account?). The effect on the reader is both intellectual — we must work harder to interpret — and thematic: it raises questions about truth, memory, and the reliability of all representation.

Practice Q&A

Attempt each question before revealing the model answer. Focus on producing analytical, evaluative responses.

ANALYSEA poem begins: "This is the land of lost content, / I see it shining plain." Analyse the effect of the opening.
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Model Answer
The demonstrative "This" creates an immediacy that paradoxically points to something distant — a "lost" land that can be seen but not reached. "Content" as a noun (rather than adjective) elevates happiness to the status of a place, making it tangible yet geographically unreachable. The verb "shining" suggests both beauty and the quality of a mirage — something visible but insubstantial. The enjambment between lines mirrors the act of reaching across a divide. The overall effect is one of luminous nostalgia: the speaker can perceive happiness with painful clarity but cannot return to it.
EVALUATEHow effective is first-person narration for a story about trauma?
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Model Answer
First-person narration creates intimacy — the reader experiences trauma from inside, making it visceral and immediate rather than observed from a clinical distance. However, it also introduces limitation: the narrator may not fully understand their own experience, creating gaps that the reader must interpret. This is arguably a strength, as trauma is characterised by fragmentation and incomplete processing. A potential weakness is that the reader has no external perspective against which to measure the narrator's account, which could limit thematic range. The effectiveness ultimately depends on whether the writer exploits the form's limitations as a feature — using unreliability, gaps, and emotional distortion to mirror the experience of trauma itself — or simply uses it as a transparent vehicle for telling.
COMPAREText A uses long, flowing sentences. Text B uses short, fragmented ones. Both describe grief. Compare their effects.
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Model Answer
Text A's long sentences create a sense of drowning in grief — the clauses accumulate without relief, mirroring the overwhelming, inescapable nature of loss. The reader is pulled through the sentence without pause, experiencing grief as a continuous, engulfing force. Text B's fragments, by contrast, present grief as shattered — the broken syntax mirrors a mind unable to sustain coherent thought. The white space between fragments creates silence, which itself becomes meaningful: the unsaid is as powerful as the said. Together, these contrasting approaches reveal that grief is not a single experience but a spectrum — sometimes overwhelming in its fullness, sometimes devastating in its emptiness. The comparison illuminates how form is never neutral; it actively shapes the reader's emotional and intellectual experience.
ANALYSEWhat is the effect of ending a novel mid-sentence?
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Model Answer
Ending mid-sentence is a radical structural choice that denies closure at the most fundamental level — not just narratively but grammatically. It suggests that the story continues beyond the text's boundaries, challenging the reader's expectation that a book will provide resolution. This technique can imply interruption (the narrator's voice is cut off, suggesting death, censorship, or silencing), endlessness (life does not conform to neat narrative arcs), or reader participation (the reader must complete the sentence, and therefore the meaning, themselves). The effect is profoundly unsettling because it violates the contract between writer and reader — the promise that a story, once begun, will be brought to conclusion.
EVALUATEApply a feminist lens to a fairy tale where the princess is rescued by a prince.
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Model Answer
A feminist reading reveals that the rescue plot positions women as passive objects whose value lies in being chosen, while men are active agents whose identity is confirmed through heroic action. The princess's imprisonment (tower, sleep, enchantment) can be read as a metaphor for the restrictions patriarchy places on women: their agency is literally removed. The prince's reward (the princess herself) reduces a human being to a prize, conflating romance with ownership. However, a nuanced feminist reading might also note that some versions of fairy tales contain traces of female agency that were gradually edited out as the stories were collected and published by male editors — suggesting the text is not simply "sexist" but a site of ideological negotiation across history.
ANALYSEAnalyse the effect of repetition in the phrase: "We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields."
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Model Answer
The anaphoric repetition of "we shall fight" creates a cumulative, incantatory rhythm that builds determination and unity. The first-person plural "we" is politically strategic — it dissolves individual fear into collective resolve, making the listener feel part of a shared endeavour. The progression through specific locations (beaches, landing grounds, fields) creates a sense of total coverage — there is nowhere the fight will not reach, conveying both geographical comprehensiveness and absolute commitment. The rhetorical power lies in the structure: each clause adds a new location but maintains the same grammatical frame, creating a paradox of variation within repetition that mirrors the speech's message — the fight may change location, but the will remains constant.
JUSTIFYWhy is ambiguity a strength rather than a weakness in literary texts?
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Model Answer
Ambiguity is a strength because it multiplies meaning — a text open to several interpretations contains more significance than one with a single, fixed message. It demands active reader participation, as the reader must weigh competing possibilities and construct their own understanding. This mirrors the complexity of human experience: emotions, motives, and events are rarely unambiguous, and a text that reflects this complexity is arguably more truthful. Ambiguity also gives a text longevity — great literature continues to generate new readings because its meaning is not exhausted by any single interpretation. In the eAssessment, recognising and discussing ambiguity demonstrates the highest level of analytical sophistication.
SYNTHESISEHow do language and structure work together to create meaning in a text you have studied?
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Model Answer
Language and structure are inseparable — the what (language) is always shaped by the how (structure). For example, a writer might use violent imagery (language) within very short sentences (structure) to create a combined effect of shock and brutality that neither element achieves alone. The imagery provides the content; the sentence length provides the rhythm and pacing. Synthesis means recognising that form and content are one: the structure is not a container for meaning but a generator of it. In the strongest analysis, you show how language choices only achieve their full effect because of where and how they are positioned within the text's structure, and vice versa.

Flashcard Review

Tap each card to reveal the answer. Try to answer from memory first.

What is a "critical lens"?
A theoretical framework (feminist, postcolonial, Marxist, psychoanalytic) used to read a text and reveal particular power structures or ideological assumptions.
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What makes an eAssessment commentary strong?
Specificity (precise quotation), interpretation (what it means), evaluation (why it matters), contextual awareness, and consistent literary terminology — zero plot summary.
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What is thematic convergence?
The way multiple themes in a text reinforce or complicate each other, creating richer, more layered meaning than any single theme could achieve alone.
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Language analysis vs structure analysis?
Language = word-level choices (connotation, diction, imagery). Structure = how the text is organised (syntax, paragraph order, narrative sequence, pacing, form).
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What does "ambiguity" contribute?
Opens the text to multiple interpretations, creating richness and requiring active reader participation. Reflects the complexity of the experience being represented.
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Name the four critical lenses.
Feminist (gender/power), Postcolonial (race/colonialism), Marxist (class/economics), Psychoanalytic (unconscious/repression).
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What is the PEE+E framework?
Point (identify technique), Evidence (quote), Explanation (what it means, how it works), Evaluation (judge effectiveness, consider alternatives, connect to wider theme).
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What is a semantic field?
A group of related words that create a pattern of meaning. E.g., "battle," "army," "wound" form a semantic field of war — powerful when used in an unexpected context like a love poem.
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How should a comparative essay be structured?
Integrated, not sequential. Every paragraph should reference both texts and explain how they relate. Weave between texts point by point; synthesise in the conclusion.
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What does a feminist reading focus on?
Representations of gender and power, patriarchal structures, how language positions gender, whether female characters have agency or are reduced to passive roles.
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What does a postcolonial reading focus on?
Representations of colonial power, race, and cultural identity. Whose perspective dominates? How is the "other" constructed? Does the text challenge or reinforce colonial assumptions?
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What is the effect of short, truncated sentences?
Create speed, shock, and emotional impact. The staccato rhythm mirrors urgency, fragmentation, or emotional paralysis. Often used at moments of crisis or revelation.
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What is an unreliable narrator?
A narrator whose account is untrustworthy due to contradictions, bias, limited knowledge, or deliberate deception. Forces the reader into an active, suspicious reading position.
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What is juxtaposition?
Placing contrasting elements side by side to highlight differences, create tension, or produce irony. The contrast generates meaning through the relationship between the elements.
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What should a commentary conclusion do?
Offer an original, evaluative insight linking language, structure, and theme. Not a summary, not a repetition — a considered interpretive claim about what the text ultimately achieves.
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Practice Test — 20 Questions

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