Advanced Analysis — Novels, Speeches, Film

At Grade 8 you move beyond identifying literary devices to evaluating authorial choices. You practise comparative analysis, work with non-literary forms (speeches, documentaries, film), and integrate context into your arguments.

What You'll Learn

  • Explain how context (historical, cultural, social) shapes a text's meaning and purpose
  • Identify and analyse genre conventions in tragedy, satire, and detective fiction
  • Analyse literary devices: motif, irony, structural devices, in medias res, non-linear narrative
  • Write comparative analysis that weaves two texts together
  • Analyse speeches using rhetoric (ethos, logos, pathos)
  • Analyse film techniques including camera angles, lighting, and editing
  • Structure analytical paragraphs using PEE/PEEL

IB Assessment Focus

Criterion A — Analysing: Analyse content, context, language, structure, technique, and style, and explain their effects on the audience.

Criterion B — Organising: Employ organisational structures that serve the context and intention.

Criterion C — Producing text: Produce texts that demonstrate insight, imagination, and sensitivity.

Criterion D — Using language: Use appropriate and varied language to create effect.

Grade 8 Upgrade: At this level, you must evaluate authorial choices (not just describe them), include context as an analytical tool, and compare texts by weaving them together rather than writing about them separately.

Context & Genre Conventions

Context is not just background information — it is an analytical tool. At Grade 8, you must explain how the historical, cultural, or social context shapes specific choices in the text.

What Is Context?

Context refers to the circumstances surrounding a text's creation and reception. There are three main types:

Type of ContextDefinitionExample
HistoricalThe time period and major events during which the text was writtenA novel written during WWII may use darkness imagery to reflect suffering and moral uncertainty
CulturalThe social norms, values, and beliefs of the society that produced the textA Victorian novel may present strict class divisions as “natural” because that was the cultural norm
SocialThe specific social circumstances or movements relevant to the textA speech given during the civil rights movement uses the language of justice and freedom

How to Use Context Analytically

Do not simply state context as background. Instead, show how context shapes meaning:

  • Weak: “This novel was written during WWII.” (just background)
  • Strong: “Written during WWII, the author's repeated use of 'darkness' imagery reflects the widespread sense of moral uncertainty and loss that characterised the period, transforming a simple weather description into a symbol of collective despair.” (context shapes meaning)

Genre Conventions

A genre is a category of text with shared conventions (features the audience expects). Understanding genre conventions allows you to analyse how authors conform to or subvert expectations.

GenreKey ConventionsAnalytical Note
TragedyProtagonist with a fatal flaw (hamartia); downfall or death; catharsis (emotional release) for the audience; often involves fate or hubrisAnalyse how the tragic hero's flaw drives the plot; consider whether the audience feels sympathy or moral judgement
SatireUses humour, irony, exaggeration, and ridicule to criticise society, politics, or human behaviour; tone can be gentle or savageIdentify the target of criticism; explain how the humour makes the critique more effective than a direct argument
Detective FictionA crime or mystery to be solved; clues planted throughout; a detective figure; red herrings (misleading clues); a resolution revealing the truthAnalyse how the author controls information to build suspense; consider the role of the reader as “co-detective”

Subverting Genre Conventions

Authors sometimes deliberately break genre conventions for effect. When analysing, ask: “Does this text follow the expected conventions, or does it subvert them — and why?”

  • A tragedy where the hero refuses to fall may challenge audience expectations and suggest human resilience
  • A detective story with no resolution may reflect the author's view that justice is not always achievable
  • A satire that targets its own genre becomes meta-commentary on storytelling itself

Literary Devices at Grade 8

At this level, you are expected to analyse not just language-level devices (metaphor, simile) but also structural and thematic devices that shape the entire text.

Key Devices — Definitions & Effects

DeviceDefinitionEffect / Purpose
MotifA recurring image, symbol, word, or idea that appears throughout a textReinforces and develops the theme; creates cohesion; gives the reader a symbolic thread to follow
IronyA contrast between what is said or appears to be true and what is actually trueCreates layers of meaning; engages the reader in detecting the gap between appearance and reality; can be humorous or tragic
Dramatic ironyWhen the audience knows something a character does notBuilds tension and suspense; creates sympathy or dread; makes the audience feel complicit
Verbal ironyWhen a character says the opposite of what they meanReveals character attitude; can create humour or highlight hypocrisy
Situational ironyWhen the outcome is the opposite of what is expectedChallenges reader expectations; can highlight the absurdity or injustice of a situation
In medias resBeginning a story in the middle of the action, then filling in background laterImmediately hooks the reader; creates urgency and disorientation; raises questions that drive the narrative forward
Non-linear narrativeA story told out of chronological order (flashbacks, flash-forwards, parallel timelines)Mirrors how memory works; creates suspense by withholding information; allows thematic juxtaposition
ForeshadowingHints or clues about what will happen later in the textBuilds anticipation; creates dramatic irony when re-read; rewards attentive readers
JuxtapositionPlacing two contrasting ideas, images, or characters side by sideHighlights differences; forces the reader to compare and evaluate; sharpens thematic points

Analysing Devices — Beyond Identification

Critical Rule: Identifying a device is only the first step. At Grade 8, you must explain why the author chose it, what effect it has on the reader, and how it develops the theme or message.

Weak vs Strong Analysis

Weak (identification only): “The author uses irony.”

Better (identification + effect): “The author uses irony to create humour.”

Strong (identification + effect + evaluation): “The author uses dramatic irony when Romeo believes Juliet is dead. The audience, knowing she is merely asleep, feels increasing dread as Romeo reaches for the poison. Shakespeare uses this gap between character knowledge and audience knowledge to heighten the tragedy — the death becomes not just sad but preventable, which intensifies the audience's emotional response.”

Structural Devices in Detail

In Medias Res

Latin for “in the middle of things.” The narrative begins at a crucial or exciting moment, then fills in the background later through flashbacks or exposition.

Example: “The bomb exploded at 3:14 PM. Three hours earlier, Sarah had been drinking coffee in her kitchen, unaware that her life was about to change.”

Effect: Immediately hooks the reader by plunging them into action. Raises urgent questions (What happened? Why?) that compel the reader to continue. Creates a sense of disorientation that mirrors a character's experience.

Non-Linear Narrative

The story is told out of chronological order. This can include flashbacks (analepsis), flash-forwards (prolepsis), or parallel timelines.

Example: A novel alternates between a character's childhood and adult life, gradually revealing how past trauma shapes present behaviour.

Effect: Mirrors the way memory actually works (fragmented, non-sequential). Allows thematic connections between different time periods. Creates suspense by withholding key information until the most impactful moment.

Comparative Analysis Technique

Comparative analysis means examining two or more texts (or two aspects of one text) for similarities and differences. The critical skill is weaving — discussing both texts together, not one after the other.

The Golden Rule: Never write about Text A then Text B separately (the “A-then-B” trap). Instead, weave them together point by point. Each paragraph should discuss both texts around a shared point of comparison.

The Comparative Structure

  1. Point — State the shared idea, theme, or technique you are comparing
  2. Evidence A — Provide a quotation or reference from Text A
  3. Evidence B — Provide a quotation or reference from Text B
  4. Comparative analysis — Explain how the texts are similar or different in their treatment, and why this matters

Example: A-then-B (Weak)

“Text A uses metaphors to describe power. The author compares the leader to a lion. Text B also discusses power. The character in Text B is described as tall and commanding.”

Problem: The texts are discussed separately. There is no comparison, no analysis of similarity/difference, and no evaluative point.

Example: Woven (Strong)

“Both texts explore the theme of power through physical imagery, yet they achieve contrasting effects. In Text A, the leader is compared to a lion — a metaphor suggesting natural, almost instinctive authority. In Text B, however, the character's power is communicated through the physical reactions of others: they ‘stepped back’ and ‘lowered their eyes.’ While Text A presents power as an inherent quality, Text B shows it as a social construct — power exists only because others recognise and defer to it.”

Strength: Both texts discussed in every sentence. Clear point of comparison. Analytical depth (inherent vs socially constructed power).

Comparative Connectives Table

To Show SimilarityTo Show DifferenceTo Show Development
Similarly…In contrast…Furthermore…
Both texts…However… / Whereas…Moreover…
Like [Text A], [Text B]…Unlike [Text A], [Text B]…Building on this…
In the same way…On the other hand…This is reinforced by…
Equally…Conversely…Additionally…
Just as [Text A]…, so too [Text B]…While [Text A]…, [Text B]…In addition to this…

Tip: Start with a Shared Point

Every comparative paragraph should begin with a shared point — something both texts have in common (a theme, a technique, a character type). Then explain how they treat that point similarly or differently.

  • “Both texts explore the theme of isolation, yet they convey it through contrasting techniques.”
  • “Power is central to both texts, but while Text A presents it as dangerous, Text B suggests it is necessary.”
  • “Each author uses first-person narration, yet the effect is strikingly different.”

Analysing Speeches & Film

At Grade 8, you analyse non-literary texts including speeches and film. These require specific analytical vocabulary and frameworks.

Speech Analysis — The Three Rhetorical Appeals

Rhetoric is the art of persuasion. Ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle identified three key appeals that speakers use to convince an audience:

AppealDefinitionTechniques UsedExample
Ethos (credibility)Establishing the speaker's authority, trustworthiness, or moral characterCredentials, personal experience, moral language, respectful tone“As a doctor with 20 years of experience, I can tell you…”
Logos (logic)Using facts, statistics, evidence, and logical reasoning to support a claimData, statistics, cause-and-effect reasoning, examples“Studies show that 78% of students who read daily achieve higher grades.”
Pathos (emotion)Appealing to the audience's emotions to create sympathy, anger, fear, or hopeEmotive language, anecdotes, vivid imagery, rhetorical questions“Imagine a child who goes to bed hungry every night.”

Other Speech Techniques

TechniqueDefinitionEffect
RepetitionRepeating a word or phrase for emphasisDrives home a key message; creates rhythm; makes the point memorable
Rule of threeListing three items or ideas togetherCreates a satisfying, complete-sounding pattern; persuasive and rhythmic
Rhetorical questionA question asked for effect, not requiring an answerEngages the audience; makes them think; implies the answer is obvious
Direct addressSpeaking directly to the audience using “you” or “we”Creates connection and inclusivity; makes the audience feel personally involved
AnecdoteA short personal story used to illustrate a pointMakes abstract ideas concrete; creates emotional connection; builds ethos
ImperativesCommand forms (“Stand up,” “Fight for…”)Creates urgency; empowers the audience; calls them to action

Film Analysis — Key Techniques

Film uses visual and auditory techniques instead of (or alongside) written language. When analysing film, treat each technical choice as a deliberate decision by the director — equivalent to an author's word choice.

CategoryTechniqueEffect
Camera AnglesHigh angle (looking down)Makes subject appear small, weak, vulnerable, or insignificant
Low angle (looking up)Makes subject appear powerful, dominant, threatening, or heroic
Eye-levelNeutral; places the viewer on equal terms with the subject
Close-upEmphasises emotion, detail, or significance; creates intimacy
LightingHigh-key (bright, even)Creates a cheerful, safe, optimistic atmosphere
Low-key (dark, shadows)Creates mystery, tension, danger, or a sinister mood
Chiaroscuro (strong contrast)Highlights moral ambiguity; suggests a character torn between good and evil
EditingFast cuts / montageCreates urgency, chaos, excitement, or the passage of time
Slow pace / long takesBuilds tension, allows reflection, creates an uneasy or contemplative mood
Cross-cutting (parallel editing)Shows two events happening simultaneously; builds suspense; invites comparison
SoundDiegetic sound (within the story world)Creates realism; can be used symbolically (e.g., a ticking clock = time running out)
Non-diegetic sound (added, e.g., soundtrack)Guides emotional response; foreshadows events; creates atmosphere
Analytical Approach: When analysing film, use the same structure as text analysis: Technique → Example → Effect on audience. Treat the director as the “author” making deliberate choices to shape meaning.

Analytical Paragraph Structure

The PEE/PEEL framework provides a reliable structure for analytical paragraphs. At Grade 8, you extend this to include evaluation and context.

PEE — The Basic Framework

LetterStepWhat to Do
PPointState your analytical claim — what technique is being used and what it achieves
EEvidenceProvide a quotation (in quotation marks) or specific reference from the text
EExplanationExplain HOW the evidence supports your point — analyse word choice, connotations, and effect on the reader

PEEL — The Grade 8 Extension

LetterStepWhat to Do
PPointState your analytical claim (device + effect + connection to theme)
EEvidenceQuotation or specific reference from the text
EExplanationAnalyse the evidence: device, word choice, connotations, effect on reader
LLinkLink back to your overall argument or thesis; evaluate the effectiveness of the technique; consider context

Model PEEL Paragraph

P: Shakespeare uses dramatic irony in Act 5 to intensify the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet's deaths.

E: When Romeo discovers Juliet in the tomb and declares “Death, that hath sucked the honey of thy breath, hath had no power yet upon thy beauty,” the audience knows she is merely sleeping.

E: The word “beauty” is significant — Romeo notices she does not look dead, which ironically brings him close to the truth without realising it. The gap between what Romeo believes and what the audience knows creates an agonising tension. The audience wants to intervene but cannot, making the tragedy feel both inevitable and preventable.

L: This dramatic irony is central to the play's message about the destructive power of the feud. Shakespeare suggests that it is not fate alone but human error — miscommunication, haste, and the inability to see the truth — that destroys the lovers. In the Elizabethan context, this may have served as a warning against family pride overriding reason.

Adding Context to Your Analysis

At Grade 8, context should be woven into your PEEL paragraph, not bolted on as a separate sentence. The best approach is to integrate it into your Link:

Practice Q&A

Work through these questions, then tap to reveal the model answer. Try to answer from memory first.

COMPARETwo texts both address the theme of power. One is a speech by a political leader; the other is a novel excerpt. Compare how they communicate this theme.
+
Model Answer
Both texts explore the theme of power, but through contrasting means. The speech uses direct address and first-person pronouns (“I will ensure…”) combined with logos (statistics) and repetition to assert authority — the speaker claims power by presenting themselves as knowledgeable and decisive. The novel excerpt, in contrast, communicates power through characterisation and subtext — the character's status is shown through others' deference and the physical descriptions of their commanding presence. While the speech makes power claims explicit, the novel implies it through literary technique, inviting the reader to infer rather than be told.
ANALYSEExplain how the use of in medias res affects the reader's experience of a novel that opens with a car crash before returning to the events leading up to it.
+
Model Answer
By opening with the car crash, the author uses in medias res to immediately immerse the reader in a moment of high tension and crisis. This structural choice creates urgency — the reader is hooked because they encounter the climactic event before they understand why it happened. When the narrative then returns to the events leading up to the crash, the reader experiences a form of dramatic irony: they know the outcome but the characters do not. This transforms ordinary scenes into moments of foreshadowing and dread. The technique also mirrors the fragmented nature of memory after trauma — events are not recalled in neat chronological order but are shaped by their emotional impact.
ANALYSEA speech uses the rule of three: “We will fight for justice, we will fight for equality, we will fight for freedom.” Analyse the effect of this technique.
+
Model Answer
The speaker uses the rule of three combined with repetition (“we will fight”) and direct address (“we”) to create a powerful cumulative effect. The three abstract nouns — “justice,” “equality,” “freedom” — build in emotional intensity, each carrying strong positive connotations that appeal to the audience's sense of pathos. The repetition of “we will fight” creates a rhythmic, almost chant-like quality that unifies the audience and transforms the speech from an argument into a call to action. The inclusive pronoun “we” makes the audience feel they are part of the struggle, reinforcing the speaker's ethos as someone who fights alongside them rather than above them.
ANALYSEIn a film, a villain is consistently shot from a low angle with low-key lighting. Explain the effect of these directorial choices.
+
Model Answer
The director uses a low camera angle to make the villain appear to loom over the audience, creating a sense of dominance and threat. The audience is literally forced to “look up” at the character, placing them in a position of vulnerability. This is reinforced by the low-key lighting, which casts deep shadows across the villain's face, obscuring their features and suggesting hidden motives or a dual nature. The combination of these two techniques establishes the villain as both physically imposing and morally ambiguous — the shadows prevent the audience from fully “seeing” who they truly are, creating unease and mistrust. The director's choices are equivalent to an author's use of sinister imagery and withholding of information.
ANALYSEA satirical novel portrays a society where children are in charge and adults must attend school. What is the purpose and effect of this genre technique?
+
Model Answer
The author uses satire by inverting the normal power structure of society — children rule and adults are subordinate. This exaggeration serves to criticise the real-world treatment of children's perspectives: by making the reversal absurd, the author forces the reader to question whether the current system is any less arbitrary. The humour created by imagining adults struggling with school rules makes the critique more accessible and engaging than a direct argument would be. The satirical technique also works through irony: the reader recognises the absurdity of the fictional world, which in turn reveals the absurdity (or at least the assumptions) embedded in the real world. Like Orwell's Animal Farm, the text uses an exaggerated scenario to illuminate uncomfortable truths about power and authority.
ANALYSEExplain the difference between a motif and a theme, using an example from a novel you have studied.
+
Model Answer
A theme is the central message or idea explored by a text (e.g., “the corrupting influence of power”). A motif is a specific recurring element — an image, symbol, phrase, or idea — that reinforces and develops the theme. For example, in Macbeth, the theme is guilt and ambition. The motif of blood recurs throughout: Lady Macbeth's “Out, damned spot!” uses blood as a symbol of guilt that cannot be washed away. The motif of blood supports the theme by providing a concrete, recurring image that the audience can track — each time blood appears, it deepens the audience's understanding of how guilt consumes the characters. In short: a theme is the idea; a motif is the vehicle that carries it.
EVALUATEHow effective is the use of a non-linear narrative structure in a story about a character recovering from trauma? Justify your view.
+
Model Answer
A non-linear narrative is highly effective for a story about trauma recovery because it mirrors the actual psychological experience of trauma. Trauma survivors do not recall events in neat chronological order — memories intrude unexpectedly, triggered by sensory details or situations. By structuring the narrative non-linearly, the author forces the reader to experience this fragmentation first-hand, creating empathy through form. The reader, like the character, must piece together what happened, making the story an active experience rather than a passive one. Furthermore, withholding key information until later in the narrative creates dramatic tension and makes the eventual revelation more impactful. The structure is not merely decorative but thematically essential — it embodies the very subject it describes.

Flashcard Review

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

What is context, and why does it matter in analysis?
The historical, cultural, or social circumstances in which a text was written. It matters because it shapes the text's meaning, purpose, and the audience's interpretation. At Grade 8, context must be used analytically — explain HOW it shapes meaning.
Tap to reveal
What is a motif?
A recurring image, symbol, word, or idea throughout a text that develops or reinforces a theme. It is the specific vehicle that carries the theme (e.g., blood in Macbeth = guilt).
Tap to reveal
Name the three types of irony.
Dramatic irony: audience knows what a character does not. Verbal irony: saying the opposite of what is meant. Situational irony: the outcome is the opposite of what is expected.
Tap to reveal
What is in medias res?
Latin for “in the middle of things.” A narrative that begins in the middle of the action, then fills in background later. Effect: hooks the reader, creates urgency, raises questions.
Tap to reveal
What are the three rhetorical appeals?
Ethos (credibility/trust), Logos (logic/facts/evidence), Pathos (emotion). Used in speeches to persuade an audience.
Tap to reveal
What are the key conventions of tragedy?
A protagonist with a fatal flaw (hamartia); a downfall or death; catharsis (emotional release) for the audience; often involves fate or hubris (excessive pride).
Tap to reveal
What is satire?
A genre that uses humour, irony, and exaggeration to criticise society, politics, or human behaviour. Examples: Swift's Gulliver's Travels, Orwell's Animal Farm.
Tap to reveal
What is the “golden rule” of comparative analysis?
Never write about Text A then Text B separately. Weave them together: Point (both) → Evidence A → Evidence B → Comparative analysis (similar/different).
Tap to reveal
What does PEEL stand for?
Point (analytical claim), Evidence (quotation), Explanation (analyse the evidence), Link (connect to thesis/evaluate/context).
Tap to reveal
What is a non-linear narrative?
A story told out of chronological order (flashbacks, flash-forwards, parallel timelines). Effect: mirrors memory, creates suspense, allows thematic juxtaposition.
Tap to reveal
What does a low camera angle suggest in film?
Makes the subject appear powerful, dominant, threatening, or heroic. The audience “looks up” at the character, placing them in a position of vulnerability.
Tap to reveal
What is the difference between diegetic and non-diegetic sound?
Diegetic: sound within the story world (characters can hear it). Non-diegetic: added sound like a soundtrack (only the audience hears it). Both guide emotional response.
Tap to reveal
Name three comparative connectives for showing difference.
In contrast… / However… / Whereas… / Unlike [Text A], [Text B]… / On the other hand… / Conversely… (any three)
Tap to reveal
What are the conventions of detective fiction?
A crime or mystery to be solved; clues planted throughout; a detective figure; red herrings (misleading clues); a resolution revealing the truth.
Tap to reveal
How is Grade 8 analysis different from Grade 6?
Goes beyond identifying devices to explaining effects; includes context as an analytical tool; evaluates (not just describes) authorial choices; compares texts; references structural devices as well as language.
Tap to reveal

Practice Test — 20 Questions

0Score / 20
Q 1 / 20
Correct
Wrong
Score