Let’s be honest: in most subjects, you study to find the “right” answer. In Literature, you study to find the most “convincing” argument. Whether you are analyzing a Shakespearean sonnet or a post-colonial novel from the heart of Africa, the goal isn’t just to tell the story—it’s to tear it apart and see how it works.
Below is the exam paper download link
Past Paper On Introduction To Literature And Literacy Criticism For Revision
Above is the exam paper download link
“Introduction to Literature and Literary Criticism” is often the unit that shocks students the most. It’s the moment you stop being a reader and start being a critic. But how do you prepare for an exam where the “answers” seem so subjective?
The secret lies in the application of theory. You don’t need to read every book ever written; you need to know how to use the “lens” the examiner gives you.
[Download the Introduction to Literature and Literary Criticism Past Paper PDF Here]
To help you sharpen your critical teeth, we’ve put together a Q&A based on the recurring themes found in university-level literature exams.
What is “Literary Criticism,” and why does it sound so negative?
Don’t let the word “criticism” fool you. In this context, it doesn’t mean finding fault or being “mean” to a book. It comes from the Greek word krinein, meaning “to judge” or “to discern.”
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The Exam Reality: Literary criticism is the set of tools (theories) we use to uncover the hidden meanings in a text. If a past paper asks you to “critique” a poem, they are asking you to interpret it through a specific framework, not just summarize what happens.
How do I keep all the “Isms” straight (Marxism, Feminism, Formalism)?
This is the biggest hurdle for students. Think of these theories as different pairs of colored glasses.
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Marxism: You are looking for power struggles, money, and social class.
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Feminism: You are looking at how gender roles are portrayed and if the female voice is silenced or empowered.
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Formalism (New Criticism): You ignore the author’s life and the history of the time. You look only at the words on the page—the metaphors, the meter, and the irony.
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Pro Tip: In your revision, take one short story and try to summarize it in three different ways using these three “glasses.”
What does “The Intentional Fallacy” mean?
You’ll likely see this term in a Formalism-heavy exam. It’s the idea that an author’s intent doesn’t actually matter.
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The Logic: Once a book is published, the author’s opinion on what it means is no more important than yours. The text must stand on its own. If you see this in a past paper, the examiner is testing whether you can analyze a text without relying on “The author meant to say…”
Why is “Context” so important in Post-Colonial criticism?
Unlike Formalism, Post-Colonialism demands that you look outside the book. You need to know the history of the empire, the language of the oppressor, and the struggle for identity.
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The Insight: If you are analyzing an African or Caribbean text, the examiner expects you to discuss Hybridity or Mimicry. Using these specific terms from theorists like Homi Bhabha or Edward Said will instantly elevate your essay from a “C” to an “A.”

How to Revise Using This Past Paper
A literature exam is essentially an “argumentation” marathon. Use the PDF below to train your brain for the sprint.
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The Terminology Audit: Scan the paper for terms like mimesis, catharsis, allegory, or hegemony. If you can’t define them in one sentence, look them up immediately.
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The “Drafting” Drill: Pick a poem from the past paper. Instead of writing a full essay, write three different thesis statements for it—one Psychoanalytic, one Structuralist, and one Deconstructionist.
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The Quote Bank: You don’t need to memorize whole books. Memorize three “flexible” quotes from your core texts that could work for multiple themes (e.g., a quote about a house could represent “security,” “imprisonment,” or “social status”).