One of the distinctive features of Unit 3, Area of Study 2 in VCE Literature is the requirement to develop a second interpretation of a set text, informed by a supplementary reading. This process deepens students’ understanding by showing how different critical lenses can illuminate different aspects of the same text.
A supplementary reading is a text that provides a framework, context, or critical perspective through which to re-read the set text. It might be:
- A scholarly article or academic essay
- A piece of literary criticism or theory
- A historical or cultural document
- A theoretical statement (e.g., an exposition of feminist, postcolonial, or psychoanalytic ideas)
- Writing by a teacher or critic that offers a distinctive reading of the text or its context
What a supplementary reading is not:
- Simply a review or evaluation of the set text’s quality
- A plot summary or biography
- A text that duplicates the set text without adding interpretive perspective
REMEMBER: The supplementary reading is a tool for interpretation, not an answer key. You use it to develop your own reading — you are not simply reporting what the supplementary reading says about the set text.
A supplementary reading enriches interpretation by:
Providing a new analytical lens
A feminist reading of a Victorian novel may reveal patterns of control and resistance that were invisible in a reading focused on class. A postcolonial reading of a canonical text may expose the assumptions of empire that the text naturalises. A psychoanalytic reading may illuminate the unconscious patterns in a character’s behaviour.
Revealing what the text cannot say
By explaining the historical or cultural context of a text, a supplementary reading may show what ideas were unavailable or impermissible at the time of composition — and help explain the text’s silences.
Challenging the first interpretation
A strong supplementary reading may directly challenge aspects of the first interpretation, requiring the student to refine, qualify or reconceive their earlier reading. This tension between interpretations is intellectually productive.
Adding contextual depth
Historical, cultural or biographical information in the supplementary reading can make close reading more precise by explaining what specific images, allusions or conventions meant to the text’s original audience.
EXAM TIP: Do not summarise the supplementary reading as if it were a text to be analysed in its own right. Use it instrumentally: explain how the ideas, arguments or contextual information it provides change your reading of specific moments in the set text.
The second interpretation is not simply the first interpretation with footnotes from the supplementary reading added. It should represent a genuine development of the student’s understanding — a reading that sees the set text differently because of the new lens the supplementary reading provides.
What typically changes:
- Focus: the second interpretation may attend to aspects of the text that the first interpretation underemphasised
- Evaluative orientation: the second interpretation may be more critical of an assumption the first interpretation took for granted
- Evidence: the second interpretation may foreground different textual moments as significant
- Complexity: the second interpretation often reveals tensions or ambiguities within the text that the first reading resolved too neatly
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes write a second interpretation that is essentially the same as the first, with the supplementary reading mentioned but not genuinely integrated. The supplementary reading should visibly change the way you read the text — if it doesn’t, you haven’t genuinely used it.
When writing a response that involves both interpretations, effective strategies include:
- Clearly signalling the shift between the first and second interpretation
- Using language that frames the supplementary reading as a lens: “Informed by [the supplementary reading’s] argument that…, a reading of this passage reveals…”
- Showing how specific moments in the set text look different when seen through the supplementary reading’s perspective
- Acknowledging what each interpretation illuminates and what it leaves in shadow
Useful language for integrating supplementary readings:
- “Through the lens of [supplementary reading’s framework], the [imagery/character/structure] can be understood as…”
- “[Supplementary reading author] argues that [claim] — a claim that resonates with the [passage] in which…”
- “The supplementary reading reveals that what the text presents as [X] is in fact [Y]…”
APPLICATION: Before writing, prepare a diagram showing: (1) what your first interpretation claims, (2) which specific ideas in the supplementary reading alter this, and (3) what specific passages in the set text look different as a result.
VCAA FOCUS: The Study Design specifies that the second interpretation should be developed “through an exploration of a supplementary reading, considering the implications of changing historical, social and cultural contexts.” The contextual dimension is important: the supplementary reading should help you understand how different contexts produce different readings.