SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. 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.
Darwinism
William Faulkner
Allen Ginsberg
Henry David Thoreau
2. People who are best adapted to survive are chosen through the process of natural selection.
American Adam
Darwinism
Stanza
William S. Burroughs
3. Best-known and most influential early Naturalist. Rougon-Marcquart
John Steinbeck
Booker T. Washington
Emile Zola
Narrative Poem
4. (Colonial Period) First writer of American Literature. Wrote 'The Generall Historie of Virginia - New England - and The Summer Isles.' Archetypal American.
John Smith
Transcendental Club
Loaded Words
End Rhyme vs Internal Rhyme
5. Anne Bradstreet - Michael Wigglesworth - Edward Taylor
Three main colonial era poets
William Byrd
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Jonathan Edwards
6. Famous Poet and Novelist - 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'
Imagist Poetry
Washington Irving
Maya Angelou
Theodore Dreiser
7. Confessional Poet - Wrote 'Lord Weary's Castle' and 'In Life Studies'
Puritan Poetry
Bret Harte
Gothic
Robert Lowell
8. A single sheet of paper printed on one or both sides. 'The Dying Redcoat'
Broadside
Social Darwinism
T.S Eliot
Kate Chopin
9. Ezra Pound and T.S Eliot
Edgar Allen Poe
Anne Sexton
Allegory
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
10. Leader of naturalism in American writing. Wrote 'An American Tragedy'
Epic Story
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Theodore Dreiser
James Weldon Johnson
11. Wrote 'Native Son -' and 'Black Boy' - First Black Best-Seller - Staunch Communist : Believed it was black America's best hope for equality.
Richard Wright
Ezra Pound
Loaded Words
Rhyme Scheme
12. American novelist - essayist - social critic - painter and spoken performer. Most of his works are autobiographical. Frequently experimented with drugs. He wrote the 'Naked Lunch' and the 'Cities of Red Night'
Nativism
Alice Walker
Beat Writers
William S. Burroughs
13. Ranked as top American novelist - even though few of his contemporaries recognized his genius. Moby Dick is considered to be America's greatest prose epic. It is also top contender for best American novel. Wrote the first great romance about the Sout
Robert Lowell
William S. Burroughs
Herman Melville
Rhythm
14. The beat or rhythm of a poem - created by a pattern of stressed an unstressed syllables.
Rhyme Scheme
Nativism
Alice Walker
Meter
15. Confessional Poet - Won a Pulitzer for 'Live or Die'
Frederick Douglass
Anne Sexton
Romanticism
The Day of Doom
16. Wrote 'Howl -' ' Empty Mirror -' and 'Kaddish and Other Poems' - Poet
Allen Ginsberg
Emile Zola
Countee Cullen
Emily Dickinson
17. Produced a number of sketches - poems - and a one-act pay titled 'Cane.'
Lyres
Three main colonial era poets
Ezra Pound
Jean Toomer
18. 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
Thomas Morton
Lyres
Sonnet
Transcendental Club
19. 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
Edward Teller
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Puritan Poetry
Stanza
20. Unorthodox writers who hung around the bars and coffee houses of San Francisco's North Beach.
Stanza
Beat Writers
James Baldwin
W.E.B Du Bois
21. A group of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.
Drama
Foot
John Adams
Social Darwinism
22. The repeated use of identical sounds.
Henry David Thoreau
Rhyme
Emily Dickinson
Allen Ginsberg
23. Used to describe literature that was pandered to the polite - refined - and delicate elements of society. Denied the unsavory underbelly of life.
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Genteel Tradition
Countee Cullen
Refrain
24. (Colonial Period) One of colonial New England's most eminent clergyman. Greatest achievement was as an historian of the Puritan experience. 'Diary of Cotton Mather' - Account of Mather wrestling with sexual temptation to marry a much younger women di
John Winthrop
Jonathan Edwards
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Cotton Mather
25. (Colonial Period) One of the most brilliant of American thinkers. Theologian and philosopher; vigorous defender of Calvinistic orthodoxy at the end of the Puritan era. Influenced major nineteenth century writers such as Emerson - Hawthorne - Melville
Kate Chopin
Social Darwinism
Jonathan Edwards
e.e cummings
26. Work did not have a political agenda. Wrote 'Their Eyes Were Watching God -' 'Mules and Men -' and 'Jonahs Gourd Vine.' Considered one of the key black writers of the 20th Century.
Cotton Mather
Determinism
Zora Neal Hurston
Henry James
27. Friedrich Nitezche's belief in the 'will to power' as the primary force of society and the individual.
Allegory
Nietzscheism
Jack London
Toni Morrison
28. Created the first American adventure story. First successful American novelist. 'Father of the American novel.' Very litigious - cranky and vain. Most famous for the 'Leatherstocking Tales': A series of five novels about the frontiersman - Natty Bump
John Smith
Kate Chopin
Melting Pot
James Fenimore Cooper
29. She holds a unique place in American history as both the wife of one president and the mother of another. In her own right - she was an ardent American patriot. Her perseverance during the American Revolution kept her family together and enabled her
Jean Toomer
Determinism
Abigail Adams
Booker T. Washington
30. A pattern of stressed unstressed syllables that create a beat - as in music.
Rhythm
Romanticism
Erica Jong
Frank Norris
31. Won the Nobel Prize - Novels concentrate on the turmoil of modern Jewish life.
Saul Bellow
Allen Ginsberg
Flannery O'Connor
Loaded Words
32. The idea that there is something different - unique and special about Americans.
Atavism
American Adam
Darwinism
Stephen Crane
33. Imagist Poet - Wrote 'In a Station of the Metro -' ' The Pisan Cantos -' 'Hugh Selwyn Mauberly -' and 'Mauberly.' Modeled 'Cantos' after Whitman's 'Leaves of Grass' - Infamous traitor; Staunch supporter of Mussolini during WWII. Didn't speak for the
Vachel Lindsay
Edgar Lee Masters
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Ezra Pound
34. A piece of literature intended to be performed in front of an audience.
Imagist Poetry
Thomas Jefferson
Drama
Atavism
35. 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
Stephen Crane
Emile Zola
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
36. End : occurs when words at the ends of lines of poetry rhyme. Internal: occurs when words within a sentences share the same sound - such as 'Each narrow cell in which we dwell.'
Willa Cather
Nativism
End Rhyme vs Internal Rhyme
Modernism
37. Characterized by: Ordinary Language - Free Verse - Concentrated Word Pictures - Very specific words and phrases - Advanced by Ezra Pound and Amy Lowell; also utilized by Robert Frost
Refrain
Imagist Poetry
Racialism
Loaded Words
38. Wrote 'The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man' and 'Lift Every Voice and Sing -' (The Black National Anthem)
The Day of Doom
William Faulkner
James Weldon Johnson
Jack Kerouac
39. Wrote 'The Call of the Wild -' 'White Fang -' ' Sea Wolf -' and 'To Build a Fire.' Socialist. Naturalist
The Declaration of Independence
Jack London
Narrative Poem
Norman Mailer
40. Autobiography is considered the one of the greatest ever written. Wrote Poor Richard's Alamanac
Norman Mailer
Benjamin Franklin
Refrain
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
41. Wrote 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' - first American novel to sell a million copies. The most influential book of the 19th century. Credited with starting the Civil War. Most famous American woman of her day.
Persona
Jean Toomer
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Carl Sandburg
42. (Colonial Period) Wrote Of Plymouth Plantation (First Thanksgiving) - Chronicled the Pilgrim experience from the religious considerations that caused them to leave England for Holland and then for America.Style is dignified and Grave - and events are
Romanticism
Determinism
Samuel Sewall
William Bradford
43. (Colonial Period) Only person to publicly repent his part in the Salem Witch Trials. Published America's first anti-slavery tract.
Stanza
Vachel Lindsay
John Steinbeck
Samuel Sewall
44. A story told in song form. Ballads often tell stories of adventure and love.
Thomas Paine
Stanza
Ballad
Dorthy Parker
45. First Black female poet to win a Pulitzer. Best known for her poems 'The Bean Eaters' and 'We Real Cool.'
Stanza
Gwendolyn Brooks
Allen Ginsberg
Persona
46. 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.
Verse
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Lyres
Edwin Arlington Robinson
47. Typically referred to as the greatest American novelist (next to Mark Twain) of the second half of the 19th century. Main theme of his work was the innocence and exuberance of America compared to the corruption and wisdom of Europe. Wrote 'The Portra
Henry James
Vachel Lindsay
Ezra Pound
Edgar Allen Poe
48. Wrote 'Portnoy's Complaint.' Work reflects the changing attitude of Jews living in post-World War II America.
Iambic Pentameter
Phillip Roth
Racialism
Cotton Mather
49. Pattern of five feet (groups of syllables) - each having one unstressed syllable and one stressed syllable.
Darwinism
Rhyme
Racialism
Iambic Pentameter
50. Chicago School : Verses often concern ordinary - everyday people; realistic poems and dramatic emphasis attract a large audience. Wrote 'Chicago -' and a biography of Abraham Lincoln. Poems describe everyday Americans - have a positive tone - use sim
The 3 primary literary genres
Imagist Poetry
Atavism
Carl Sandburg