No text exists in a vacuum. Every author writes from within — and in response to — a specific historical moment, social structure and cultural framework. Understanding this context is essential for nuanced literary analysis in VCE English.
Context refers to the circumstances surrounding a text’s production and reception:
- Historical context: The political, economic and social events of the era
- Social context: Class structures, gender norms, racial hierarchies, family structures
- Cultural context: Belief systems, artistic movements, cultural practices and values
- Biographical context: The author’s personal experience (used carefully — avoid biographical fallacy)
- Reception context: How audiences at different times have read and valued the text
Values are the principles, beliefs and priorities a text endorses, challenges or interrogates. Authors embed values through:
- Which characters are rewarded or punished
- Whose perspective is centred or marginalised
- What is treated as natural, normal or desirable
- What is presented as transgressive, threatening or deviant
Common value systems examined in VCE texts:
| Value Domain | Examples |
|---|---|
| Gender | Patriarchal norms, feminine virtue, masculinity codes |
| Race/ethnicity | Colonial attitudes, assimilation, cultural pride |
| Class | Social mobility, inherited privilege, labour and worth |
| Religion/morality | Sin and redemption, duty, secularism vs faith |
| Nation/belonging | Patriotism, diaspora, exile, settler-colonial identity |
The historical moment of writing shapes what the author could say, how they said it, and what they took for granted as background knowledge.
Example: A novel written in 1950s Australia would reflect Cold War anxieties, post-war social conservatism and White Australia Policy — even if these are not the explicit subject.
Meaning is also shaped by when and by whom a text is read. Contemporary readers may identify attitudes the original audience accepted as natural — this gap is analytically productive.
A common error is judging historical texts by contemporary moral standards without acknowledging the gap. Instead:
- Acknowledge the historical values present in the text
- Analyse how the author positions the reader in relation to those values
- Interrogate whether the text endorses, complicates or critiques those values
- Consider what the text might mean for contemporary readers
Do not paste contextual information in as background paragraphs. Integrate context into your analysis:
‘Writing in the wake of second-wave feminism, the author frames the protagonist’s domestic confinement not merely as personal unhappiness but as systemic oppression — a reading reinforced by the imagery of walls and locked doors that recurs throughout the text.’
Context should illuminate why an author made particular choices — it is the because in your analysis.
For VCE, you are not required to conduct external research during exams, but thorough classroom study of your text’s context is expected. Know:
- When and where the text was written/produced
- The major social debates of that era
- The author’s positionality (gender, race, class, nationality)
- Any historical events directly referenced or alluded to in the text
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA rewards students who can connect textual evidence to contextual understanding — showing how a text both reflects and responds to its historical moment. Avoid treating context as mere ‘background’; use it to deepen your reading of specific moments in the text.