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2023 OCR A-Level English Literature - H472 模擬試題連答案詳解

Thinka Jun 2023 Cambridge OCR A Level-Style Mock — English Literature - H472

120 300 分鐘2023
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of the Jun 2023 Cambridge OCR A Level English Literature - H472 paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from Cambridge.

H472/01 部分 1: Shakespeare

Answer one two-part question (a and b) on the Shakespeare play you have studied.
2 題目 · 30
題目 1 · Close Passage Analysis (Part a)
15
Read the passage below and answer the question that follows.

**HAMLET**
Get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners? I am myself indifferent honest; but yet I could accuse me of such things that it were better my mother had not borne me: I am very proud, revengeful, ambitious, with more offences at my beck than I have thoughts to put them in, imagination to give them shape, or time to act them in. What should such fellows as I do crawling between earth and heaven? We are arrant knaves, all; believe none of us. Go thy ways to a nunnery. Where's your father?
**OPHELIA**
At home, my lord.
**HAMLET**
Let the doors be shut upon him, that he may play the fool no where but in's own house. Farewell.
**OPHELIA**
O, help him, sweet powers!
**HAMLET**
If thou dost marry, I'll give thee this plague for thy dowry: be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny. Get thee to a nunnery, go: farewell. Or, if thou wilt needs marry, marry a fool; for wise men know well enough what monsters you make of them. To a nunnery, go, and quickly too. Farewell.
**OPHELIA**
O heavenly powers, restore him!
**HAMLET**
I have heard of your paintings too, well enough; God has given you one face, and you make yourselves another: you jig, you amble, and you lisp, and nick-name God's creatures, and make your wantonness your ignorance. Go to, I'll no more on't; it hath made me mad. I say, we will have no more marriages: those that are married already, all but one, shall live; the rest shall keep as they are. To a nunnery, go.

*(Act 3 Scene 1)*

Discuss the dramatic presentation of the relationship between Hamlet and Ophelia in this passage, exploring how Shakespeare's language and dramatic techniques shape our response to Hamlet's state of mind.
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解題

### Key Analytical Points for Discussion:

* **The Motif of the 'Nunnery'**: Candidates should discuss the double meaning of 'nunnery' (a convent, suggesting a place of sanctuary to escape the sinfulness of the world, versus a slang term for a brothel, indicating Hamlet's belief in Ophelia's corruption or complicity in the court's degeneracy).
* **Prose vs. Verse**: The sudden shift from the philosophical blank verse of the 'To be or not to be' soliloquy to the harsh, erratic prose in this dialogue. This stylistic transition dramatically represents Hamlet's mental fracturing, simulated madness (his 'antic disposition'), or a genuine breakdown of rational control under the pressure of espionage.
* **Self-Deprecation and Existential Dread**: Hamlet's confession of being 'proud, revengeful, ambitious' and his rhetorical question ('What should such fellows as I do crawling between earth and heaven?') project a profound disgust with human existence. He generalizes his guilt to all mankind ('arrant knaves, all'), rejecting the possibility of pure human relationships.
* **The Turning Point ('Where's your father?')**: A crucial dramatic moment. Hamlet's abrupt question suggests he has realized Polonius and Claudius are eavesdropping behind the arras. His subsequent cruelty to Ophelia and the warning to Polonius ('play the fool no where but in's own house') reflect his sense of betrayal, casting Ophelia as a deceitful decoy.
* **Misogyny and Attacks on Artificiality**: Hamlet's tirade against women's cosmetics ('paintings') and behaviour ('you jig, you amble, and you lisp') mirrors wider Renaissance anxieties about deception. He links physical makeup ('one face, and you make yourselves another') with moral duplicity, projecting his anger at Gertrude's infidelity directly onto Ophelia.
* **Ophelia's Pathos**: Ophelia's short, defensive, and prayerful interjections ('O, help him, sweet powers!', 'O heavenly powers, restore him!') illustrate her innocence, deep distress, and her tragic conclusion that Hamlet is truly mad, highlighting the communicative chasm between them.

評分準則

### OCR H472/01 Mark Scheme Alignment (15 Marks)

This question assesses **AO1** (Articulate, informed, personal and creative responses) and **AO2** (Analyse ways in which meanings are shaped in literary texts).

* **Level 6 (13–15 marks)**:
* **AO1**: Excellent, highly articulate response with a perceptive, conceptualised argument. Formulates a sophisticated critical overview of Hamlet's state of mind and his dynamic with Ophelia.
* **AO2**: Perceptive and detailed analysis of Shakespeare's linguistic choices, prose style, and dramatic pacing. Outstanding analysis of motifs (e.g., 'nunnery', 'paintings') and performance context.

* **Level 5 (11–12 marks)**:
* **AO1**: Clear, sustained, and coherent argument. Well-structured and focused on the prompt.
* **AO2**: Detailed analysis of how language, prose structure, and character interaction construct meaning.

* **Level 4 (8–10 marks)**:
* **AO1**: Competent and clear response with a straightforward argument addressing Hamlet's state of mind.
* **AO2**: Competent explanation of dramatic techniques and vocabulary used in the passage.

* **Level 3 (5–7 marks)**:
* **AO1**: Some structured argument, but might tend toward plot summary or generalized comments.
* **AO2**: Descriptive understanding of the scene; some identification of language devices but lacking depth of close analysis.

* **Level 1–2 (1–4 marks)**:
* Assertion and basic comprehension of the scene with little to no close-reading skills applied.
題目 2 · Literary Essay (Part b)
15
‘The tragic power of Hamlet lies in its exploration of the gap between public duty and private conscience.’ Evaluate this view with close reference to Shakespeare’s dramatic methods in the play as a whole.
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解題

To achieve high marks, candidates should structure their response around a clear thesis that directly addresses the prompt. Points of discussion may include: 1. Hamlet's Soliloquies: Analyze how Shakespeare uses soliloquies (such as 'To be or not to be' and 'O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I!') to expose the deep divide between the heroic role of avenger that Hamlet is publicly expected to play and his private, contemplative moral conscience. 2. Foils to Hamlet: Contrast Hamlet's hesitation with Laertes and Fortinbras, who prioritize public honor and filial duty over moral introspection. Laertes's willingness to 'cut his throat i' th' church' highlights Hamlet's reluctance to damn his own soul. 3. Claudius's Dual Identity: Examine the gap between Claudius's polished, authoritative public speeches (e.g., Act 1, Scene 2) and his private guilt and spiritual torment revealed in his confession scene (Act 3, Scene 3). 4. Ophelia's Tragedy: Discuss how Ophelia is crushed by her public duty to her father Polonius and the state, which forces her to suppress her private feelings for Hamlet, ultimately leading to her madness. 5. Alternative Interpretations: Consider whether the tragedy is driven by other forces, such as political corruption, psychological dysfunction, or inescapable fate, rather than solely the conflict between duty and conscience.

評分準則

Marks are awarded across three Assessment Objectives: AO1 (5 marks): Ability to construct a coherent, well-argued literary essay using appropriate academic terminology and clear expression. AO2 (5 marks): Detailed analysis of Shakespeare's dramatic and linguistic methods, including imagery, soliloquies, foils, and dramatic irony. AO5 (5 marks): Engagement with the prompt and alternative critical interpretations, showing an understanding of how different readings of the play's tragic focus can exist.

H472/01 部分 2: Drama and Poetry pre-1900

Answer one comparative essay question, comparing one pre-1900 drama text and one pre-1900 poetry text from the prescribed lists.
1 題目 · 30
題目 1 · Comparative Essay
30
‘In literature pre-1900, the confinement of individuals by social expectations is shown to be a source of both suffering and resistance.’

In the light of this view, consider how writers explore the confinement of individuals. In your answer, compare one drama text and one poetry text from the prescribed list.
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解題

### Exemplar Comparative Analysis: Henrik Ibsen's *A Doll's House* and Christina Rossetti's *Selected Poems*

**Introduction**
- **Thesis**: Both Henrik Ibsen in his realist drama *A Doll's House* (1879) and Christina Rossetti in her Victorian poetry (such as 'From the Antique', 'No, Thank You, John', and 'Goblin Market') depict the stifling containment of individuals—particularly women—by rigid nineteenth-century social structures. While this confinement generates profound psychological and spiritual suffering, both writers ultimately present defiance and self-determination as vital responses to systemic oppression.

**Point 1: The Presentation of Confinement and its Resulting Suffering**
- ***A Doll's House* (Ibsen)**: Nora Helmer’s confinement is physicalized through the domestic setting of the living room (the 'doll’s house'), which she never leaves during the first two acts. Her suffering is masked by performative playfulness ('my little skylark', 'squirrel'), but her internal torment becomes manifest as the threat of exposure looms. Torvald’s pet names and control over her diet (the macaroons) emphasize her infantile entrapment. The tarantella dance symbolizes her frantic attempt to escape her psychological cage.
- **Rossetti's Poetry**: In 'From the Antique', the speaker describes the crushing weight of gender expectations: 'It's a weary life, it is, she said / Doubly blank in a woman’s lot.' The desire for complete erasure ('I wish and I wish I were a man / Or better than any being were not') conveys intense existential suffering. Similarly, in 'Shut Out', the physical barrier of the 'shadowless dust' and the iron bars of the lost garden represents the exclusion from agency and spiritual fulfillment.

**Point 2: Confronting the Confining Male Gaze and Marital Expectations**
- ***A Doll's House***: Torvald's love is shown to be purely aesthetic and conditional on Nora's submission. When Nora realizes she has been treated as a decorative possession first by her father and then by her husband, she remarks, 'I have been performing tricks for you, Torvald.' Her confinement is rooted in the bourgeois ideal of the 'angel in the house.'
- **Rossetti's Poetry**: In 'No, Thank You, John', the speaker resists the confinement of compulsory courtship. She rejects the male suitor’s attempt to impose a narrative of pity and romantic obligation, asserting her own boundaries with crisp, assertive rhythm: 'I never said I loved you, John'. In 'Goblin Market', the goblin merchants represent predatory mercantile and sexual appetites that seek to trap and consume female innocence, leading to Laura's physical wasting (confinement to her bed and illness).

**Point 3: Resistance, Transgression, and the Reassertion of Autonomy**
- ***A Doll's House***: Nora's final rebellion is famously punctuated by the 'slamming of the front door'—an acoustic symbol of total rupture with societal expectations. She chooses the exile of self-education over the comfortable confinement of her marriage, declaring her duty to herself is 'equally sacred' to her duties as a wife and mother.
- **Rossetti's Poetry**: Resistance in Rossetti is often found in spiritual autonomy and quiet non-conformity. In 'Goblin Market', Lizzie's resistance is active and sacrificial; she stands like a 'beacon' against the goblins' assault, refusing to consume their fruit, which ultimately redeems her sister. In 'Twice', the speaker bypasses human judgment entirely, presenting her heart to God ('Refine with fire its gold') after being rejected by a male lover, establishing a higher spiritual authority that transcends earthly confinement.

**Conclusion**
- Both Ibsen and Rossetti demonstrate that social confinement is not merely an external inconvenience but an existential threat to the self. While Ibsen uses the dramatic realism of the domestic sphere to stage a radical, secular exit from society, Rossetti utilizes lyric poetry to carve out spaces of spiritual and moral integrity that quietly subvert the Victorian patriarchy.

評分準則

### Assessment Objectives Breakdown (OCR H472 Component 01 Section 2)

This essay is marked out of 30, utilizing the following weightings:
- **AO3 (Context)**: 10 marks (33.3%)
- **AO1 (Response/Expression)**: 5 marks (16.7%)
- **AO2 (Analysis of Structure/Form/Language)**: 5 marks (16.7%)
- **AO4 (Connections)**: 5 marks (16.7%)
- **AO5 (Different Interpretations)**: 5 marks (16.7%)

#### Level Descriptors:

**Level 6 (26–30 Marks)**
- **AO3**: Consistently informed, detailed, and sophisticated analysis of the cultural, historical, and literary contexts of both texts (e.g., Victorian gender roles, domestic realism vs. Tractarianism/Rossetti's faith).
- **AO1**: Excellent, highly articulate, and argument-driven response, using sophisticated literary terminology accurately and precisely.
- **AO2**: Deep and perceptive analysis of how meanings are shaped. For drama, discusses staging, dialogue, and physical props. For poetry, analyzes meter, rhyme, form, and imagery.
- **AO4**: Seamlessly integrated, perceptive comparisons between the chosen drama and poetry texts, showing insightful parallels and contrasts.
- **AO5**: Critical engagement with different interpretations or critical views of both texts, showing a nuanced understanding of varying perspectives.

**Level 5 (21–25 Marks)**
- **AO3**: Good, purposeful discussion of context, linked directly to the comparison of confinement and resistance.
- **AO1**: Clear, fluent, and well-structured argument with consistent focus on the prompt.
- **AO2**: Clear analysis of key literary techniques (e.g., dramatic irony in *A Doll's House*, symbolic settings in Rossetti's poetry).
- **AO4**: Clear and coherent comparative points linking drama and poetry features.
- **AO5**: Good awareness of alternative readings or critical interpretations of the texts.

**Level 4 (16–20 Marks)**
- **AO3**: Competent understanding of context, though links to the text may occasionally feel historical rather than literary.
- **AO1**: Competent structure and argument, expressing ideas clearly.
- **AO2**: Described and explained literary and dramatic methods with some analysis of effects.
- **AO4**: Clear comparisons made, though they may be presented sequentially rather than fully integrated.
- **AO5**: Some awareness of different interpretations or critical debates.

**Level 3 (11–15 Marks)**
- **AO3**: Some awareness of context, but highly generalized (e.g., 'women had no rights in the 19th century').
- **AO1**: Basic structure, reasonably clear expression but may be repetitive.
- **AO2**: Basic identification of literary features (e.g., rhyme schemes, stage directions) with limited analysis of how they create meaning.
- **AO4**: Simple connections made between the two texts.
- **AO5**: Limited or descriptive reference to different interpretations.

H472/02 部分 1: Contextual Close Reading

Write a critical appreciation of the unseen passage, relating your discussion to your reading of your chosen topic.
1 題目 · 30
題目 1 · Unseen Passage Critical Appreciation
30
Read the following unseen passage and write a critical appreciation of it, relating your discussion to your reading of Dystopian Literature.

---

The light in the Concourse of Uniformity never faltered; it was a white, sterile hum that seemed to coat the teeth. Julius stood before the biometric interface, waiting for the blue pulse that confirmed his productivity index for the prior shift. Around him, hundreds of identical grey tunics shuffled forward, their boots striking the polished synthetic floor with a rhythm that sounded like a collective, metallic heartbeat.

A screen flickered above. The face of the Administrator, projected to a height of thirty feet, smiled with cold, static benevolence. 'A quiet mind is a productive mind,' the image murmured, its voice synthesized to eliminate any trace of human inflection.

Julius felt the familiar tightening in his chest—the forbidden friction of an unrecorded thought. He remembered, or thought he remembered, a time when the sky outside the dome possessed variations of grey, even moments of brilliant, terrifying blue. But such memories were like wet ink on blotting paper, expanding and dissolving until they meant nothing at all. He held his breath as the scanner swept across his retinas. If the machine detected the slight elevation in his cortisol levels, the gate would not click open. It would slide shut, and he would be escorted to the Correction Annex, where minds were gently unstitched and re-woven without the errant threads.

---
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解題

### Overview of the Passage
The passage explores a high-tech, highly regimented dystopian environment where human consciousness is strictly policed by automated systems and ubiquitous surveillance. The tone is clinical and claustrophobic, reflecting the protagonist's internal terror against a backdrop of manufactured, sterile harmony.

### Detailed Literary Analysis

#### 1. Language, Imagery, and Sensory Degradation (AO2)
* **Synesthesia and Physiological Discomfort:** The passage opens with a striking description of the light as a "white, sterile hum that seemed to coat the teeth." By mixing visual, auditory, and tactile sensations, the writer establishes an immediate sense of visceral discomfort and unnatural cleanliness.
* **De-individualization:** The citizens are reduced to "hundreds of identical grey tunics," striping them of their humanity. The sound of their movement is described as a "collective, metallic heartbeat," suggesting that the state has successfully mechanized its populace, transforming individuals into components of a massive machine.
* **The Irony of Benevolence:** The face of the Administrator projects "cold, static benevolence." The oxymoron underscores the hypocrisy of totalitarian systems that present control as care. The state slogan, "A quiet mind is a productive mind," uses synthetic, soothing voice modulations to enforce a chilling conformity.

#### 2. Psychological Tension and Memory (AO2)
* **Internal vs. External Conflict:** The narrative moves from the external observation of the sterile Concourse to Julius's interiority. The phrase "the forbidden friction of an unrecorded thought" captures the danger of mental independence in a panoptic state.
* **Fragility of Memory:** Julius's recollection of "terrifying blue" skies suggests an organic past that has been artificially erased. The simile comparing memories to "wet ink on blotting paper" beautifully illustrates the deliberate dilution and ultimate destruction of historical truth and personal history.
* **Physicality of Fear:** The suspense is heightened during the retinal scan. The machine measures "cortisol levels," showing how the state has conquered not just external behavior, but internal biology.

#### 3. Connections to Dystopian Conventions (AO3)
* **Surveillance State:** Like Winston Smith in Orwell's *1984* or Offred in Atwood's *The Handmaid’s Tale*, Julius is subjected to constant biological and psychological scrutiny. The threat of the "Correction Annex" mirrors institutions of systemic re-education and torture.
* **Linguistic Control and Euphemism:** The term "Correction Annex," where minds are "gently unstitched and re-woven," utilizes a benign domestic metaphor (weaving/sewing) to describe a terrifying process of lobotomization or psychological erasure. This mirrors real-world and fictional regimes using euphemisms to mask violence.

評分準則

### Assessment Objectives Break Down (Total: 30 Marks)

* **AO2: Analyse ways in which meanings are shaped in literary texts (15 Marks / 50%)**
* **Band 6 (13–15 marks):** Assured, exceptionally detailed analysis of the writer’s choices of language, imagery, and structure. Deep exploration of effects such as synesthesia, mechanical metaphors, and domestic euphemisms for state violence.
* **Band 5 (10–12 marks):** Clear, analytical discussion of language, syntax, and narrative techniques, explaining how they construct the dystopian setting and the protagonist's anxiety.
* **Band 4 (7–9 marks):** Competent explanation of literary devices used in the passage, though perhaps more descriptive than analytical at times.

* **AO3: Demonstrate understanding of the significance and influence of the contexts in which literary texts are written and received (10 Marks / 33.3%)**
* **Band 6 (9–10 marks):** Outstanding ability to link the passage's themes (surveillance, memory erasure, bodily control, administrative euphemism) to wider dystopian literature (e.g., Orwell, Atwood, Huxley, Zamyatin) with sophisticated contextual synthesis.
* **Band 5 (7–8 marks):** Consistently links the passage's details to standard conventions of the dystopian genre, showing a strong grasp of contextual influences.
* **Band 4 (5–6 marks):** Addresses contextual elements and general dystopian features, though links may occasionally be generic.

* **AO1: Articulate informed, personal and creative responses to literary texts, using associated concepts and terminology, and coherent, accurate written expression (5 Marks / 16.7%)**
* **Band 6 (5 marks):** Excellent, fluent writing with precise critical vocabulary and an impeccably structured argument.
* **Band 5 (4 marks):** Clear, well-structured, and accurate expression with appropriate terminology and a logical flow.
* **Band 4 (3 marks):** Competent expression with occasional technical errors, but generally coherent and easy to follow.

H472/02 部分 2: Comparative Essay

Answer one comparative essay question on your chosen topic, comparing at least two texts from the prescribed list (including at least one core text in bold).
1 題目 · 30
題目 1 · essay
30
‘In dystopian literature, survival depends not on political resistance, but on the preservation of individual memory.’

In the light of this comment, compare the ways in which writers present memory and the past in dystopian fiction.

In your answer you must compare at least two texts, including at least one core text (chosen from **Nineteen Eighty-Four** or **The Handmaid’s Tale**).
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解題

### Analytical Essay Guide & Sample Arguments

#### Introduction
* **Define and challenge the prompt**: Students should address how memory is positioned not merely as a passive reflection of the past, but as an active, highly subversive battleground. In both *Nineteen Eighty-Four* and *The Handmaid's Tale*, the state's monopoly on reality relies on the systematic erasure of history.
* **Thesis**: While overt political resistance is largely rendered impossible by the omnipresent surveillance of Oceania and Gilead, the preservation of personal memory acts as the primary tool of psychological survival. However, the ultimate efficacy of this survival is contested: while Winston’s memory is eventually systematically overwritten by the state, Offred’s narrative structure suggests that memory can survive even when the individual is lost.

#### Paragraph 1: The Systematic Erasure of Collective History vs. Private Memory
* **George Orwell (*Nineteen Eighty-Four*)**: Focuses on the state's active, institutionalized manipulation of the past via the Ministry of Truth. Winston’s daily job is the literal destruction of history (the 'memory hole'), which contrasts with his illicit diary writing. His diary represents a desperate attempt to externalize memory and create an objective, historical record outside the Party's control.
* **Margaret Atwood (*The Handmaid's Tale*)**: Gilead uses selective biblical appropriation and structural amnesia to erase women's historical agency. Offred counteracts this by retrieving memories of her previous life—her name, her husband Luke, her daughter, and her feminist mother. These memories function as an internal 'underground railroad' of the mind, keeping her original identity intact.
* **Comparison (AO4)**: While Winston struggles to recall objective history (such as life before the Revolution), Offred's memories are intensely personal, sensory, and domestic. Both writers present memory as a direct challenge to the state's claim of absolute, singular truth.

#### Paragraph 2: Physical Anchors and Catalysts of Memory
* **Orwell**: Analyze the significance of the glass paperweight. It is a physical relic of a past age, representing an unaltered, beautiful slice of history containing 'a world of its own.' Winston's childhood memories of his mother and sister sinking in a well represent a time of authentic, non-political human emotion and sacrificial love—concepts entirely foreign to Party ideology.
* **Atwood**: Discuss how sensory experiences trigger memory. The smells of the gymnasium (sweat, chewing gum, perfume) in the opening chapter recall the lost freedom of the late 20th century. Similarly, the Latin phrase carved in her closet ('Nolite te bastardes carborundorum') acts as a historical artifact left by a predecessor, connecting Offred to a collective female lineage of resistance.
* **Comparison (AO4)**: In both texts, tangible objects and sensory triggers act as anchors for deteriorating memories, demonstrating the fragility of the human mind when deprived of external historical validation.

#### Paragraph 3: Narrative Form and the Structural Reconstruction of Memory (AO2)
* **Orwell**: The third-person limited narrative perspective restricts readers to Winston's subjective, fragmented consciousness. This highlights the vulnerability of human memory under torture. In Room 101, O'Brien forces Winston to cognitively accept 'doublethink'—the idea that the past has no objective existence, leading to the absolute capitulation of his memory ('He loved Big Brother').
* **Atwood**: The novel's structure is a literal 'reconstruction.' The first-person retrospective voice fluctuates between past and present tense, emphasizing that memory is an active process of storytelling ('I would like to believe this is a story I’m telling...'). The 'Historical Notes' epilogue reveals the novel is transcribed from cassette tapes, demonstrating that while Offred may not have survived physically or politically, her voice and her memory survived Gilead.
* **Comparison (AO4)**: Atwood utilizes a fragmented, non-linear structure to mimic the fluid nature of survival through storytelling, whereas Orwell utilizes a linear, suffocating narrative trajectory that mirrors the systematic crushing of Winston's mental autonomy.

#### Paragraph 4: Contextual Alignments (AO3)
* **Orwell**: Connect to the context of mid-century totalitarianism (Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany), where regimes actively doctored historical photos, rewrote encyclopedias, and eliminated political figures from public record (damnatio memoriae).
* **Atwood**: Link to the rise of second-wave feminism and the subsequent backlash of the religious right in 1980s America. Gilead's attempt to force women into compliance relies on erasing the social and economic progress of the 1970s; thus, Offred's memories of feminist rallies and sexual freedom are highly politicized acts of preservation.

#### Conclusion
* Summarize how both authors present the defense of memory as the ultimate, albeit fragile, bulwark against totalitarian control. Conclude that while political resistance is crushed in both novels, the preservation of memory remains the only path to retaining humanity in a dehumanized landscape.

評分準則

### Marking Scheme (30 Marks Total)

This essay is assessed against the official OCR A Level English Literature Component 2 Section 2 criteria, broken down as follows:

* **AO1: Articulate, informed, and creative response (5 marks)**
* **Level 5 (5 marks)**: Excellent, consistently structured, and highly persuasive argument. Sophisticated use of academic register and precise literary terminology.
* **Level 3-4 (3-4 marks)**: Clear, coherent argument with a structured approach. Good use of literary terminology.
* **Level 1-2 (1-2 marks)**: Fragmented or descriptive writing, lacking a focused thesis or cohesive development.

* **AO2: Critical analysis of language, form, and structure (5 marks)**
* **Level 5 (5 marks)**: Highly perceptive analysis of narrative perspective, structural devices (such as Atwood's cassette tape framing device or Orwell's third-person limited narration), and linguistic techniques (e.g., Orwell's Newspeak, Atwood's sensory motifs).
* **Level 3-4 (3-4 marks)**: Competent discussion of structural elements and language choices, with some direct quotation and textual support.
* **Level 1-2 (1-2 marks)**: Relying largely on plot summary with minimal engagement with structural or stylistic techniques.

* **AO3: Understanding of cultural, historical, and literary contexts (10 marks)**
* **Level 5 (9-10 marks)**: Outstanding contextual integration. Explores how the socio-political climates of 1948 (Stalinism, WWII propaganda) and the 1980s (The Moral Majority, Second-Wave Feminism, Puritan history) shape the presentation of historical erasure.
* **Level 3-4 (5-8 marks)**: Relevant contextual connections made, though sometimes handled as external 'facts' rather than seamlessly integrated into the literary analysis.
* **Level 1-2 (1-4 marks)**: Superficial or generalized historical details; fails to link context directly to the texts.

* **AO4: Making connections and comparisons between texts (5 marks)**
* **Level 5 (5 marks)**: Fluid, sophisticated comparative connections throughout. Compares not only thematic aspects but also the stylistic and structural methods used by both authors to represent memory.
* **Level 3-4 (3-4 marks)**: Identifies clear points of comparison and contrast, though the essay may deal with the texts sequentially rather than through integrated synthesis.
* **Level 1-2 (1-2 marks)**: Minimal comparison; discusses texts largely in isolation.

* **AO5: Exploring different interpretations and critical views (5 marks)**
* **Level 5 (5 marks)**: Highly developed appreciation of alternative readings (e.g., viewing Offred's cassette tapes as a triumphant historical preservation versus the cynical view presented in the Historical Notes; debates over Winston's psychological complicity).
* **Level 3-4 (3-4 marks)**: Shows awareness of different critical interpretations or different ways of reading the endings of both texts.
* **Level 1-2 (1-2 marks)**: One-sided perspective; fails to acknowledge ambiguity or alternative readings.

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