GCSE Literature Boost: A Christmas Carol uses academic criticism and theory to relight your literary passion for this classic text and put a newfound excitement in your pedagogy. Beginning with a whistlestop tour of literary theory and criticism from 400BC to the late 20th century, Hughes explains how you can introduce your GCSE English students to themes most often reserved for undergraduate courses, improving their understanding of the text and broadening their knowledge of the subject as a whole.
Written in easily digestible chunks, each chapter considers a main theme or section of Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol through different critical lenses summarising the relevant academic theories, and shows how you can transfer this knowledge to the classroom through practical teaching ideas. Features include:
- Case studies showing how English teachers have used academic theory in practical ways.
- Ideas for teaching linked to GCSE assessment objectives at the end of each chapter.
- Six key points at the end of each chapter that highlight the key takeaways from that chapter.
- Real examples of student work which can be used as models and exemplars.
This is essential reading for all secondary English teachers looking to create a climate of high expectations and improve their students knowledge and understanding of the big ideas in literature.
GCSE Literature Boost: A Christmas Carol uses academic criticism and theory to relight your literary passion for this classic text and put a newfound excitement in your pedagogy. Each chapter considers a main theme or section of Dickens A Christmas Carol through different critical lenses.
1. Introduction
2. A whistlestop tour of some different theoretical
lenses
3. Some theoretical lenses and A Christmas Carol
4. What might a
critical theory journey through the English Literature curriculum look like?
5. Case Studies
6. The forgotten ghost the importance of Marley
7.
Religious ideology and Dante in A Christmas Carol
8. Scrooge and the
parallels between the Book of Job
9. Ebenezer misunderstood?
10. Authorial
craft: Dickens the master of his craft
11. God bless us, every one! An
exploration of the Cratchit family
12. Its all in the name
13. Food glorious
food! Feast and famine in A Christmas Carol
14. Suffer the Little Children:
the depictions of children in A Christmas Carol
15. Its the most wonderful
time of the year
Haili Hughes is an academic at the University of Sunderland, Director of Education at IRIS Connect and was an English teacher for sixteen years. She has written five education books, speaks all over the world and advises the DfE.