Context is never background decoration. It is the living environment in which a text is produced and first received — shaping what a writer can imagine, what an audience expects, and what a text takes for granted. In VCE Literature, understanding context means reading texts as products of specific historical, social and cultural conditions.
Context operates at several interlocking levels:
| Level | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Historical | The events, politics and power structures of the time | A novel written during wartime may assume collective sacrifice as a value |
| Social | Class, gender, family structures, education systems | A Victorian novel assumes rigid class hierarchy as natural order |
| Cultural | Beliefs, aesthetics, religious traditions, myths | A text from an oral tradition assumes communal memory |
| Biographical | Author’s personal experiences, identity, position | A migrant writer’s context shapes how “belonging” is imagined |
| Literary-historical | The texts and movements that preceded the work | A Romantic poem responds to and against Enlightenment rationalism |
REMEMBER: VCAA assesses knowledge of context as it illuminates the text itself — not as a separate essay topic. Contextual knowledge should always be woven into close textual analysis.
A viewpoint is the perspective from which a text represents the world. It is shaped by context: who the author is, when they lived, whose stories were considered worth telling.
Dominant viewpoints reflect the assumptions of the most powerful groups in a society. For much of Western literary history, dominant viewpoints were white, male, middle-class and European. Many canonical texts naturalise these viewpoints — present them as universal, neutral or simply “the way things are.”
Marginalised viewpoints are those pushed to the edges: women’s inner lives, working-class experience, Indigenous perspectives, queer identity. When these viewpoints do appear in texts, they may be filtered through a dominant lens — represented rather than speaking for themselves.
Recognising these dynamics is essential to literary analysis. A student might ask:
- Whose story is centred in this text, and whose is peripheral?
- What does the text assume its reader already believes?
- What is this text unable to say, given its context?
EXAM TIP: When discussing viewpoint, avoid reducing context to a simple causal explanation (e.g. “the author was a woman therefore she wrote about women”). Instead, explore the tensions and negotiations within the text — how it both reflects and sometimes resists its context.
An assumption is a belief held so automatically by a text (or its implied reader) that it does not need to be stated. Assumptions are the invisible architecture of ideology.
Common types of assumptions in literary texts:
The concept of the implied reader is useful here: every text constructs an imagined audience who shares certain knowledge, values and assumptions. Identifying what that implied reader is assumed to know or believe reveals a great deal about the text’s ideology.
VCAA FOCUS: The Study Design asks students to examine how texts endorse, challenge and/or marginalise viewpoints, assumptions and ideas. Use these three verbs as analytical tools: which assumptions does the text endorse (take for granted as true)? Which does it challenge (put under pressure)? Which does it marginalise (diminish, silence or caricature)?
Contemporary readers bring their own context to older texts. A twenty-first century reader of a nineteenth-century novel about empire will read differently from the novel’s first audience. This temporal distance can:
- Reveal assumptions the original audience did not notice (because they shared them)
- Enable critique of ideologies that the text itself did not critique
- Risk anachronism — judging past texts by present values without understanding their historical constraints
The goal is not to condemn or excuse, but to read the text within its context while also acknowledging how our context shapes our reading.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Context is not an excuse to avoid close reading — it is the lens that makes close reading more precise. A contextually informed reader does not read a text as if it arrived from nowhere, but as the product of specific conditions that shaped every choice the author made.