Mod A was the essay I did worst in cause I've been thinking about it the wrong way. In the test I essentially treated it like a Mod B essay, with a deep individual analysis of each text. However, I now realise the whole 'textual conversation' bit about the texts is the most important part, and the connections between the texts are the most salient.
So I've now structured each of my three paragraphs like this: (using the Richards as an example)
- Sub thesis - focusing on either a resonance or a dissonance between the texts.
- Context sentence - focusing specifically on the contextual change between Pacino's time and Shakespeare's time to result in the disparity between the new text and the old text.
- Start with a concept from the old text, doing a full QAT (quote, analysis, technique). This can be 2-3 sentences. Specifically highlight the thing that made the old text original compared to the new one, whether it's context (chain of being, religious influence, Elizabethian stuff), ideas (Machiavelli, patriarchy, free will), or even characters (Shakespeare's lady Anne vs Pacino's younger lady Anne, Shakespeare's Richard vs Pacino's Richard).
- Then pick a world like 'contrastingly' or 'however', and do a QAT of how and why the new text is different regarding this concept. Even if this paragraph is about a resonance, you should say it's similar in some ways but different in others. This can be 2-3 sentences.
- Then, using a word like 'furthermore' or 'moreover', you repeat steps 3 and 4, but build from the textual conversation you have just presented. What is the next part of the textual conversation? How does one composer then respond to the other? (which is a bit silly cause one text was literally written centuries ago, but you have to go along with it) These are questions that need to be answered. Should be 3-5 sentences.
- And then a nice little conclusion to wrap it up, focusing on the cause and effect between the old text and new text
That is my guide. I'm complaining about my Mod A even though I got 18/20 in it, but it still needs some work.