(I'm apparently not that great at ending the introduction smoothly, so this is just the start of one) Let's say for a Nineteen Eighty-Four topic: ‘The novel shows that fear is the chief weapon used by those in power.’ Discuss.
I'd start off with something like ...
The Totalitarian government portrayed in George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” employed various techniques of fear enforcement to regulate and control its citizens, but however, it was only effectively executed with the addition of language manipulation.
I get on with the contention straight away and with this topic I just somehow "see" (easier for some topics but not all) that I can do the "yes, but however" contrasting/exploration straight away. The examiner would know exactly what I'm going to talk about and that's good. (Also included the key words incorporated in a different way).
Next, to continue on with what I have told the examiner ...
They recognised the instillation of terror would abolish any acts of retaliation, and so brought upon measures to facilitate deception – leading to a society in which the citizens unquestioningly obey their government.
Expanding on my contention and throwing in a bit of context.
Throughout the novel, Orwell demonstrates ....
The "author did this for this purpose...", "author has this idea in mind to illustrate this theme..." mentionings can be put in every paragraph.
Here's what it sounds like as a whole:
The Totalitarian government portrayed in George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” employed various techniques of fear enforcement to regulate and control its citizens, but however, it was only effectively executed with the addition of language manipulation. They recognised the instillation of terror would abolish any acts of retaliation, and so brought upon measures to facilitate deception – leading to a society in which the citizens unquestioningly obey their government. Throughout the novel, Orwell demonstrates .... (etc)
... and just because I feel guilty for not completing the above I'll chuck in another example.
When I'm short of time to think it sounds like:
“The novel suggests that an accurate understanding of the past is necessary both to the individual and the wider community.” Discuss.
George Orwell's dystopian novel, “Nineteen Eighty-Four”, emphasised the need to have an accurate knowledge of the past by stressing the disastrous outcomes of tampering with history. The totalitarian rulers of Oceania employed drastic measures to suppress historical events that were reinvented to lie parallel with their most recent version. It was no coincidence that the past documented the very lives each individual was bound to, and underscored the absolute need for the beholder to ‘become conscious’. In order to prevent rebellion, the government fabricated and erased critical reminders of life before the revolution that would pose a threat to their uncouth leadership. Ultimately, Orwell suggested that an unaltered past permitted an individual’s mind to roam free from restrictions.
It's missing the contrasting/exploration of other views (which I think gives an intro that extra tick) but it works alright (you can do it in the body). Other things I've missed: talking about whether it's necessary to 'both' or not - if I was correcting this I'd assume that it's heading towards the "both" affirming contention. Also lacks metalanguage, but again, recoverable within the next few paragraphs.
If I was in the examiner's shoes, I'd want to read a fluent essay that has its points clearly outlined (yep, "out there"!). Anything longwinded and I'd think "this kid doesn't understand in depth what he/she is talking about and is just rote learning random points for the exam".
So yeah, if you were going by how I write, just get your points across and show that you understand what the topic is asking you. I usually state parts of my main points explicitly in the intro but expand on it greatly in the relevant paragraph to give it that "oomph". For credibility, I'll just say that it definitely worked in the exam according to the statement of marks. Sorry for the lack of examples.