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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP American Literature
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
literature
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Local Colorist Great Niece of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Wrote 'The Yellow Wallpaper'
Social Darwinism
Jean Toomer
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Foot
2. Wrote Catcher in the Rye
Abigail Adams
Realism
J.D Salinger
Ralph Ellison
3. The repeated use of identical sounds.
Rhyme
Mayflower Compact
Langston Hughes
Transcendental Club
4. Produces ribald - exuberant - feminist poems - novels and essays. Most famous novel is 'Fear of Flying.'
Anne Sexton
Flannery O'Connor
James Baldwin
Erica Jong
5. A line or group of lines repeated at the end of a poem or song. Refrains reinforce the main point and create musical effects.
Refrain
Atavism
John Steinbeck
William Bradford
6. Won the Pulitzer and Nobel Prize - Works focused on the South - Wrote 'As I Lay Dying -' 'Sanctuary -' and 'The sound and the Fury.' Experimented with Stream of Consciousness writing. Considered the most innovative novelist of his time.
William Faulkner
Kate Chopin
Beat Writers
Determinism
7. A regular pattern of words that end with the same sound.
Frank Norris
Puritan Poetry
Rhyme Scheme
Henry James
8. The beat or rhythm of a poem - created by a pattern of stressed an unstressed syllables.
John Steinbeck
Meter
Refrain
The 3 primary literary genres
9. A single sheet of paper printed on one or both sides. 'The Dying Redcoat'
Nietzscheism
Broadside
William Bradford
Robert Frost
10. Wrote gold-rush stories like 'The Luck of Roaring Camp' and 'The Outcasts of Poker Flat'; never matched up to his previous fame local colorist
Edgar Lee Masters
Bret Harte
John Smith
T.S Eliot
11. (Colonial Period) Best-known Southern colonial writer. Famous for 'The History of the Dividing Line' and 'The Secret Diary of William Byrd of Westover'
William Faulkner
Bret Harte
William Byrd
Scientism
12. Confessional Poet - Won a Pulitzer for 'Live or Die'
Theodore Dreiser
Realism
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Anne Sexton
13. The belief that 'true' Americans were those of earlier Anglo-Saxon descent - and that this 'race' was under threat from the growing influx of Central European and Asian immigrants.
Langston Hughes
Nativism
Epic Story
Mary Wilkins Freeman
14. Local Colorist Wrote 'The Country of the Pointed Firs' Famous for use of idiomatic language - conservative values and imagery and vivid descriptions of rural New England.
Ernest Hemmingway
Sarah Orne Jewett
William Faulkner
Cotton Mather
15. Unrhymed poetry Captures natural rhythm of speech.
Nativism
Erica Jong
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Blank Verse
16. A philosophy pioneered by Ralph Waldo Emerson in the 1830's and 1840's - in which each person has direct communication with God and Nature - and there is no need for organized churches. It incorporated the ideas that mind goes beyond matter - intuiti
Atavism
Jack London
Abigail Adams
Transcendentalism
17. The primacy of science over religious - mythical - or spiritual interpretations of life.
Verse
Allen Ginsberg
Scientism
Jack London
18. The reappearance in an individual of characteristics of some distant ancestor that have not been present in intervening generations - such as hand like a hairy paw.
Atavism
Imagist Poetry
Saul Bellow
Jonathan Edwards
19. A pattern of stressed unstressed syllables that create a beat - as in music.
Free Verse
Rhythm
Flannery O'Connor
Henry James
20. Use of medieval - wild - or mysterious elements in literature. Features gloomy settings and horrifying events. Edgar Allen Poe is regarded as the American Master of Gothic writing.
Gothic
Booker T. Washington
Puritan Poetry
Blank Verse
21. (Colonial Period) Stands in direct opposition to the principles - personalities and literary styles of William Bradford and John Winthrop. Did not come to settle the land and establish God's Kingdom - but to trade beaver pelts and live pleasantly. Es
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Morton
Foot
Flannery O'Connor
22. Wrote 'My Antonia' and 'Death Comes for the Archbishop' Won a Pulitzer for her novel 'One of Ours'
Willa Cather
John Smith
Stephen Crane
James Thurbur
23. Prose - Poetry - Drama
Robert Benchley - Will Rogers and the Marx Brothers
Epic Story
The 3 primary literary genres
Ballad
24. Resisted materialism and chose a life of simplicity - close to nature. Walden is a guidebook for life - showing the reader how to live wisely in a world designed to make wise living impossible. 'On the Duty of Civil Disobedience' has become a primer
Henry David Thoreau
Broadside
Social Darwinism
Allegory
25. Wrote 'The Call of the Wild -' 'White Fang -' ' Sea Wolf -' and 'To Build a Fire.' Socialist. Naturalist
Robert Lowell
Samuel Sewall
Jack London
Broadside
26. Famous Poet and Novelist - 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'
Transcendental Club
Maya Angelou
Edward Teller
Frank Norris
27. Southern Gothic writer. Creates stories that simultaneously shock readers and reflect her strong Catholic faith.
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28. Wrote 'Grapes of Wrath -' 'Of Mice and Men -' and 'East of Eden -' and 'Winter of Our Discontent.' Awarded Nobel Prize for Literature - Pulitzer and and the National Book Award.
Aphorisms
Edwin Arlington Robinson
e.e cummings
John Steinbeck
29. Pattern of five feet (groups of syllables) - each having one unstressed syllable and one stressed syllable.
Prose
Iambic Pentameter
Gothic
Modernism
30. Wrote 'The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man' and 'Lift Every Voice and Sing -' (The Black National Anthem)
Darwinism
James Weldon Johnson
Broadside
Scientism
31. Words that carry a strong emotional overtones.
Scientism
Countee Cullen
Loaded Words
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32. Wrote 'Portnoy's Complaint.' Work reflects the changing attitude of Jews living in post-World War II America.
Bret Harte
Edgar Lee Masters
Phillip Roth
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
33. Key intellectual and philosophical voice of 19th-century America. Key player in the transcendentalist movement. First to define what made American poetry American - it is verse that celebrates ordinary experience rather than the epic themes of the pa
Walt Whitman
Robert Lowell
James Thurbur
Ralph Waldo Emerson
34. New England local color writer - is known primarily for her two collections of stories. 'A Humble Romance' and 'A New England Nun'
Saul Bellow
Realism
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Dorthy Parker
35. An organization of the leading transcendentalists living around Boston. They were interested in new developments in theology - philosophy - and literature. Major writers: Ripley - Emerson - Alcott - Fuller - Hawthorne - Thoreau - Channing - Hedge - P
Edith Wharton
Benjamin Franklin
Transcendental Club
Persona
36. All written work that is not poetry - drama or song. Articles - autobiographies - biographies - essays - novels and editorials are prose.
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Washington Irving
Jack London
Prose
37. Story in which the characters - setting and action represent abstract concepts apart from their literal meaning.
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Thomas Morton
Allegory
Romanticism
38. Famous for writing - marriages - divorces and media hype. Wrote 'The Executioner's Song.'
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Benjamin Franklin
Norman Mailer
39. Wrote 'The Invisible Man' - Considered a landmark achievement in American literature
Gwendolyn Brooks
Thomas Jefferson
Ralph Ellison
Ballad
40. Wrote 'since feeling is first -' 'somewhere i have never traveled - gladly beyond -' and 'The Enormous Room' - Experimented with : form - punctuation - spelling - typography - grammar - imagery - rhythm - and syntax.
Edwin Arlington Robinson
T.S Eliot
Nathaniel Hawthorne
e.e cummings
41. Created new poetic forms and subjects to fashion a distinctly American type of poetic expression. Rejected conventional themes - traditional literary references - allusions - and rhymes. Used long lines to capture rhythms of natural speech - free ver
Ballad
Wonders of the Invisible World
Walt Whitman
Willa Cather
42. Wrote 'The Souls of Black Folk' - Founder of the NAACP
W.E.B Du Bois
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Sylvia Plath
William Byrd
43. Major theme of 20th Century literature.
Loss of Traditional Values
The Day of Doom
Cotton Mather
Aphorisms
44. Won the Nobel Prize - Novels concentrate on the turmoil of modern Jewish life.
The 3 primary literary genres
Abigail Adams
Edgar Lee Masters
Saul Bellow
45. (Colonial Period) Primarily written to set forth orthodox Calvinist Christianity. Not considered the best representation of poetry during the whole period. Rarely approached excellence of English models. Too much of an emphasis on heavenly values and
Puritan Poetry
Alice Walker
Edgar Lee Masters
Darwinism
46. (Colonial Period) Began 'The History of New England' aboard the Arbella in 1630. Lead 2 -000 English emigrant to Massachusetts Bay. Made daily journal-style entries until his death. Intended it to be an account of his long governorship. Style is pla
W.E.B Du Bois
John Winthrop
Richard Wright
Carl Sandburg
47. Wrote 'The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass.' Escaped slave that became one o f the most effective orators of his day - an influential newspaper writer - a militant abolitionist - and a famous diplomat.
Nietzscheism
Racialism
Frederick Douglass
W.E.B Du Bois
48. Used to describe literature that was pandered to the polite - refined - and delicate elements of society. Denied the unsavory underbelly of life.
Nietzscheism
Genteel Tradition
Ralph Ellison
Transcendental Club
49. A story told in song form. Ballads often tell stories of adventure and love.
Monologue
Ballad
Realism
Calvinism
50. Considered the greatest humorist of 19th century American Literature. Wrote 'The Adventures of Tom Sawyer' and 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.' Master of 'Local Color' writing. Used vernacular - exaggeration and deadpan narrator to create humor.
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Lyric Poem
Jean Toomer
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