Developing a coherent view of a whole text requires attending not just to individual passages in isolation, but to the correlations — the connections, resonances, echoes and tensions — between key passages. This is the structural intelligence of close analysis: reading the parts in relation to each other and to the whole.
A correlation is a meaningful relationship between two or more passages of a text. Correlations may involve:
Identifying these correlations is not merely a structural exercise — it is interpretive. The correlations between passages reveal the text’s patterns of meaning, the ideas it returns to, and the intellectual and emotional arc it describes.
KEY TAKEAWAY: No passage in a literary text is an island. The meaning of any given passage is partly constructed by its relationship to other passages — what came before, what comes after, and what resonates from across the text.
A coherent view of a text is not simply an accumulation of observations about individual moments. It is an integrated account of the text as a whole — an argument about what the text means and how its parts work together to produce that meaning.
Correlations between key passages enable coherent views because:
Example of a correlation enabling a coherent view:
A novel’s opening passage describes a character standing at a window, looking out at an enclosed garden. A passage near the text’s close shows the same character standing at the same window, the garden now overgrown and wild. A close analysis that reads only the first passage might develop one interpretation; a close analysis that registers the correlation between the two passages can develop a richer account of what the text says about change, time, and the relationship between containment and freedom.
Not all passages are equally significant for close analysis. Key passages are those that:
EXAM TIP: In the close analysis task, you will typically be asked to analyse how specific passages contribute to the whole text. Prepare by selecting three to five key passages from your set text and practising tracing the correlations between them.
When writing about correlations between passages, use language that captures the nature of the relationship:
APPLICATION: Create a “passage map” of your set text: identify five or six key passages, note the page/scene, summarise the key images and ideas, and draw lines between passages that correlate. For each connection, write one sentence explaining what the correlation reveals about the text’s meaning.
VCAA FOCUS: The Study Design specifies “correlations between key passages of a text when developing a coherent view.” The phrase “developing a coherent view” signals that the analysis of correlations should be in the service of a sustained, integrated interpretation — not a series of unconnected observations about individual passages.