IB Diploma Programme · English A

IB English

Language & Literature

20 exam-style multiple-choice questions covering all core units. Past-paper difficulty. Detailed explanations for every answer.

20Questions
5Units
30Minutes

Units Covered

Readers, Writers & Texts Time & Space Intertextuality Transforming Texts Literary Devices

Core Concepts & Key Terms

Study these before attempting the questions

Unit 1

Readers, Writers & Texts

Authorial Intent vs Reader Response
The author's intended meaning may differ from how a reader interprets a text. IB exams often ask you to distinguish between what the author intends and what effect is created.
💡 Remember: "What does the author convey?" ≠ "What does the reader feel?"
Register
The level of formality in language. Formal, informal, colloquial, technical, or literary register each signals context and audience.
"The patient presented with acute myocardial infarction." → formal/medical register
Tone & Mood
Tone = the writer's attitude toward the subject. Mood = the emotional atmosphere felt by the reader.
💡 Tone is the writer's; Mood is the reader's. Writer → Tone, Reader → Mood
Purpose, Audience, Context (PAC)
Every text is shaped by who it's for (audience), why it's written (purpose), and when/where it was produced (context). IB Paper 1 requires contextual analysis using PAC.
Unit 2

Time & Space

Narrative Time: Chronological vs Non-linear
Chronological narratives follow time forward. Non-linear techniques include analepsis (flashback) and prolepsis (flash-forward).
💡 Ana- = back (as in "anachronism") | Pro- = forward (as in "progress")
Setting as Symbol
Physical space can reflect character psychology, social conditions, or thematic concerns. A decaying house may symbolise moral corruption; a garden may represent paradise or confinement.
Wuthering Heights: the wild moors vs civilised Thrushcross Grange = nature vs culture
Temporal Markers
Words like "once," "now," "meanwhile," "by the time" control the reader's sense of time and can create suspense, urgency, or nostalgia.
In Medias Res
Latin: "into the middle of things." Starting a narrative at a key moment rather than at the beginning. Common in epic poetry and contemporary fiction.
💡 Homer's Iliad begins mid-battle; many films open with a crisis scene.
Unit 3

Intertextuality & Connections

Allusion
An indirect reference to another text, historical event, myth, or cultural element. Readers familiar with the source gain added meaning.
A character described as a "modern Sisyphus" alludes to Greek myth, suggesting futile, endless labour.
Intertextuality
The relationship between texts — how texts quote, transform, or respond to one another. Every text exists in dialogue with other texts.
💡 Julia Kristeva coined the term. Think: no text is an island.
Parody vs Pastiche
Parody imitates a work for comic effect or criticism. Pastiche imitates a style in tribute, without satirical intent.
💡 Parody = mockery with purpose. Pastiche = loving imitation.
Archetype
A universal symbol, character type, or narrative pattern appearing across cultures: the Hero, the Shadow, the Mentor, the Threshold. Originates in Jungian psychology.
Unit 4

Transforming Texts

Adaptation
Rewriting or re-presenting a text in a new form, medium, or context. An adaptation may shift the genre (novel → film), the cultural setting, or the perspective (telling the story from a minor character's viewpoint).
Translation & Fidelity
Translation involves choices about fidelity to the source (foreignisation) or accessibility for the target audience (domestication). Some nuances are inevitably lost or changed.
💡 Foreignisation preserves the "strangeness" of the source; domestication makes it feel native.
Appropriation
Taking elements from an existing text and using them in a new work, often to comment on the original or to explore new social/cultural contexts.
Wide Sargasso Sea (Rhys) appropriates Jane Eyre (Brontë) to give voice to the marginalised character Bertha.
Fidelity Criticism
Evaluating an adaptation based on how "faithful" it is to the source text. IB encourages analysis of what is gained and lost through transformation.
Unit 5

Literary Devices & Style

Imagery & Extended Metaphor
Imagery: vivid descriptive language appealing to the senses. Extended metaphor: a metaphor sustained across multiple lines or throughout a work.
Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" is an extended metaphor comparing life to theatre.
Irony: Three Types
Verbal: saying the opposite of what is meant. Dramatic: audience knows more than the character. Situational: what happens is opposite to what is expected.
💡 Verbal = sarcasm possible. Dramatic = audience is "in on it." Situational = life's cruel twist.
Narrative Voice & Point of View
1st person: "I" (limited/unreliable). 2nd person: "you" (immersive). 3rd person limited: one character's perspective. 3rd person omniscient: all-knowing narrator.
Syntax & Sentence Structure
Short, declarative sentences create urgency and shock. Long, complex sentences can create a sense of exhaustion, abundance, or lyrical flow. Fragmentation suggests instability or stream of consciousness.
"She was dead. Stone dead. Before midnight." → fragmentation for dramatic impact
Diction: Connotation vs Denotation
Denotation: the dictionary/literal meaning. Connotation: the associated emotional or cultural meanings.
💡 "Slim" and "skinny" denote the same thing but have different connotations: elegant vs unhealthy.
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Answer Key & Explanations