Authors construct meaning through deliberate choices at every level: the words they select, the structures they impose, and the language features they deploy. Analysing these choices — and explaining their effects — is the core task of VCE English analytical writing.
Diction refers to word choice. Authors choose words for their denotation (literal meaning) and connotation (associated meanings and emotional weight).
Example: The word ‘expired’ rather than ‘died’ distances the narrator from grief — a connotative choice revealing emotional suppression.
A semantic field is a cluster of words from the same domain (war vocabulary: assault, siege, surrender, trench). Tracking semantic fields reveals the conceptual frame the author is imposing on their subject.
Text structure refers to the overall organisation and sequencing of a text.
| Structural Feature | Effect |
|---|---|
| Linear chronology | Clarity, causality, forward momentum |
| Non-linear / fragmented | Disorientation, unreliability, psychological realism |
| Circular structure | Return, entrapment or transformation |
| Episodic structure | Breadth, accumulation of vignettes |
| Frame narrative | Layered perspective, retrospective interpretation |
| Parallel plots | Contrast, thematic mirroring |
At the paragraph level, structures include: topic sentence, evidence, analysis, synthesis (TEEL or equivalent). At the sentence level: simple sentences create emphasis; complex sentences create subordination and nuance; compound sentences create balance or accumulation.
Using precise metalanguage is a VCAA requirement. Key categories:
| Technique | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Metaphor | Direct comparison without ‘like/as’ | ‘Life is a battlefield’ |
| Simile | Comparison using ‘like’ or ‘as’ | ‘Her voice was like gravel’ |
| Personification | Human qualities to non-human | ‘The city breathed’ |
| Symbolism | Object/place carries abstract meaning | A crumbling house = dying marriage |
| Allusion | Reference to external text/event | Biblical, classical, historical |
| Irony | Gap between stated and intended meaning | Verbal, situational, dramatic |
| Technique | Effect |
|---|---|
| Repetition / anaphora | Emphasis, incantation, escalation |
| Contrast / juxtaposition | Highlighting differences, creating tension |
| Rhetorical question | Engaging reader, implying answer |
| Short sentences | Emphasis, urgency, shock |
| Long sentences | Accumulation, complexity, breathlessness |
| Ellipsis | Trailing thought, silence, hesitation |
The critical move in analytical writing is not identifying a technique but explaining what it does:
Weak: ‘The author uses a metaphor.’
Strong: ‘The metaphor of the cage positions domesticity as imprisonment, inviting readers to question whether the protagonist’s comfort is in fact a form of confinement.’
Always answer: So what? What does this technique reveal about the author’s ideas?
EXAM TIP: Never list techniques without analysis. A single technique explored deeply earns more marks than five techniques named superficially. VCAA markers reward sustained analytical thinking.