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A Level English Literature - Improving AO2

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For OCR A Level Lit Gothic unseen - Revision material A- Grade material Improving skills and structure

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Narrative Perspective

 First-person narration – creates intimacy, unreliability, or
psychological fear.
 Third-person narration – may distance the reader or present
events as inevitable.
 Shifts in perspective – can create uncertainty or destabilise truth.
 Unreliable narrator – often central to Gothic ambiguity.

Why it matters in Gothic:
Subjective narration can blur madness vs reality, a common Gothic
theme.

Opening and Closing Structure

 In medias res openings (starting mid-action)
 Foreshadowing in the opening
 Circular endings or unresolved endings
 Climactic endings where tension peaks

Gothic effect:
Beginnings may establish unease immediately, while endings often
leave ambiguity or dread.

Build-up of Tension

Examiners often reward discussion of how the extract escalates fear.
Look for:

 Gradual increase in danger or threat
 Delayed revelation
 Withholding information
 Rising emotional intensity

This often follows a pattern:

1. Calm / normality
2. Suspicion
3. Disturbance
4. Horror or revelation

Structural Shifts or Turning Points

Moments where the passage changes direction.

Examples:

 Discovery of a hidden object or room
 Appearance of a supernatural figure

,  Realisation by the narrator
 Sudden violence or death

These moments often function as mini-climaxes within the extract.

Contrast

Structural contrasts are very common in Gothic texts.

Examples:

 Safety → danger
 Light → darkness
 Civilisation → wilderness
 Reason → madness

These contrasts help emphasise the intrusion of the uncanny into the
ordinary.

Pace and Narrative Speed

Look at how the writer controls the speed of events.

Examples:

 Slow descriptive passages to build suspense
 Rapid action sequences during moments of terror
 Short sentences for panic or urgency

Changes in pace often mark key dramatic moments.



Withholding and Revelation of Information

A key Gothic structural technique.

Writers may:

 Delay explaining events
 Hint at secrets
 Reveal key information gradually
 Leave some mysteries unresolved

This keeps readers in suspense and uncertainty.

Framing Devices

Some Gothic extracts are part of a framed narrative.

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Uploaded on
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2025/2026
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Gothic

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