Every text has multiple layers of context — the world the script describes, the world in which it was created, and the world in which it is now being performed. Understanding these layers is not an academic exercise; it is the foundation of every meaningful interpretive decision.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Context transforms a text from words on a page to a living, situated statement about human experience. Without context, interpretation becomes guesswork.
Within the immediate speech:
- What emotional state has brought the character to this moment of extended speech?
- What need is being expressed — confession, defiance, grief, persuasion?
- What are the character’s given circumstances at this specific moment?
The scene’s situational context:
- Where does the scene take place (location, time of day, social occasion)?
- Who else is present, and what are the power dynamics?
- What event or provocation has triggered this scene?
The broader historical and theatrical context:
- In what historical period and cultural setting is the play set?
- When and where was the play written and first performed?
- What were the dominant social and political conditions of that original moment?
Understanding original contexts means researching:
| Context Type | Key Questions |
|---|---|
| Historical | What were the major events of the period? |
| Social | What were the norms, roles, and hierarchies? |
| Cultural | What values, beliefs, and practices were dominant? |
| Theatrical | What conventions, spaces, and audiences shaped the original production? |
| Political | What ideologies were in conflict? What could not be said directly? |
Original context knowledge allows you to:
1. Understand what was radical vs. conventional about the script in its time
2. Identify which elements remain resonant today and which require contextualisation
3. Make informed decisions about fidelity vs. recontextualisation
EXAM TIP: In your written work, reference original contexts as evidence for your interpretive choices. “Given that the play was written during [period], the character’s silence reads as…” demonstrates sophisticated contextual thinking.
Context is not just background knowledge — it must change what you do in performance:
COMMON MISTAKE: Providing context without connecting it to production choices. Context described but not applied is research, not interpretation.
REMEMBER: VCAA assessors expect you to demonstrate knowledge of original contexts and show how that knowledge informed your interpretive decisions. Both halves are required.