Students should:
- engage with all the key terms in the question and provide relevant textual evidence, including quotes and technical analysis, to support their ideas.
In better responses, students were able to:
- demonstrate their understanding of the term ‘analyse’ as defined in the NESA glossary of terms (identify components and the relationship between them; draw out and relate implications)
- develop and maintain a clear line of argument
- organise and express ideas appropriately
- clearly identify and explore how a ‘sense of identity’ for the individual was represented within their prescribed text
- link the ‘sense of identity’ to the individual’s wider ‘community’
- demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the module by exploring how the text’s language, form and features create a sense of identity for individuals within a community and/or cultural groups.
Areas for students to improve include:
- responding to the whole question
- demonstrating accurate and relevant knowledge of the prescribed text
- linking the language used in the text to the sense of identity of the individual within a community
- making clear connections between their chosen textual evidence and how it supports their argument.
Question 1
Prose Fiction
Henry Lawson, The Penguin Henry Lawson Short Stories
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Lawson’s stories in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in late 19th Century Australia
- explore how Lawson uses language to consider stereotypical roles and/or class structures of Australian colonial society.
Andrea Levy, Small Island
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Levy’s text in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in society in post-colonial Britain
- explore how Levy uses language to consider racial, class and/or gender stereotypes in contemporary society.
Poetry
Adam Aitken, Boey Kim Cheng and Michelle Cahill (eds), Contemporary Asian Australian Poets
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in the anthology of poetry in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups
- explore how the poets use language to consider the migrant experience, including racial prejudice, language barriers and cultural conflict in society.
Ali Cobby Eckermann, Inside my Mother
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Eckermann’s poems in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in a post-colonial setting
- explore how Eckermann uses language to consider Indigenous culture, including intergenerational trauma, prejudicial stereotypes, the impact of Australian historical events on individuals and communities, and misconceptions about culture and relationships.
Drama
Ray Lawler, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Lawler’s play in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in 1950’s Australia
- explore how Lawler uses language to consider stereotypical roles and/or class structures of Australian society.
Bernard Shaw, Pygmalion
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Shaw’s play in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in Edwardian England
- explore how Shaw uses language to consider stereotypical roles and/or class structures of English society.
Alana Valentine, Shafana and Aunt Sarrinah
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Valentine’s play in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in post 9/11 Australian society
- explore how Valentine uses language to consider differing perspectives on ideas including race, gender, religion and cultural practices in contemporary society.
Nonfiction
Alice Pung, Unpolished Gem
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Pung’s text in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in post-colonial Australian society
- explore how Pung uses language to consider racial stereotypes, familial expectations and socio-economic status in contemporary Australian society.
Film
Rachel Perkins, One Night the Moon
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Perkins’ film in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in post-colonial Australia
- explore how Perkins uses language to consider cultural assumptions, including racial prejudice, gender stereotypes, the impact of Australian historical events on individuals and communities, and misconceptions about culture and relationships.
Rob Sitch, The Castle
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Sitch’s film in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in Australian society
- explore how Sitch uses language to consider cultural assumptions of Australian society to expose class, gender, racial and socio-economic tensions faced by characters in the text.
Media
Janet Merewether, Reindeer in my Saami Heart
In better responses, students were able to:
- identify and articulate individual identities conveyed in Merewether’s documentary in relation to their broader communities and/or cultural groups in a post-colonial society
- explore how Merewether uses language to consider cultural assumptions of the Saami people including, social class, ethnicity, gender and religious oppression to expose the impact of historical events on individuals and communities, and misconceptions about culture and relationships.