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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. Famous for writing - marriages - divorces and media hype. Wrote 'The Executioner's Song.'
Norman Mailer
Melting Pot
Free Verse
Henry James
2. A story in poetic form. Has plot. characters and theme.
James Weldon Johnson
Racialism
Narrative Poem
Gwendolyn Brooks
3. A 14-line poem with a set rhythm and rhyme scheme.
Polemic
Maya Angelou
John Winthrop
Sonnet
4. (Colonial Period) First writer of American Literature. Wrote 'The Generall Historie of Virginia - New England - and The Summer Isles.' Archetypal American.
Drama
John Smith
Richard Wright
Stephen Crane
5. Clever - memorable sayings.
Allegory
Determinism
Aphorisms
Edgar Lee Masters
6. Wrote 'Daddy' and 'The Bell Jar' - Confessional Poet
Imagist Poetry
Scientism
Sylvia Plath
Alice Walker
7. A piece of literature intended to be performed in front of an audience.
Dorthy Parker
Drama
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Henry David Thoreau
8. The primacy of science over religious - mythical - or spiritual interpretations of life.
Jack Kerouac
Robert Frost
Scientism
The Day of Doom
9. A group of lines in a poem. - Lines of poems are grouped into _______s - just as sentences of prose are grouped into paragraphs.
William S. Burroughs
Maya Angelou
Narrative Poem
Stanza
10. Unrhymed poetry Captures natural rhythm of speech.
Ernest Hemmingway
Allen Ginsberg
Blank Verse
Aphorisms
11. 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
T.S Eliot
Naturalism
Prose
12. A single sheet of paper printed on one or both sides. 'The Dying Redcoat'
Sonnet
Broadside
Frederick Douglass
Bret Harte
13. Wrote 'The Call of the Wild -' 'White Fang -' ' Sea Wolf -' and 'To Build a Fire.' Socialist. Naturalist
Ezra Pound
Ralph Ellison
Jack London
Aphorisms
14. 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.'
Gothic
W.E.B Du Bois
End Rhyme vs Internal Rhyme
Nativism
15. A pattern of stressed unstressed syllables that create a beat - as in music.
Rhythm
William Bradford
Modernism
Stephen Crane
16. 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.
Harriet Beecher Stowe
e.e cummings
Monologue
Naturalism
17. (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
Anne Sexton
Cotton Mather
Zora Neal Hurston
John Steinbeck
18. Wrote 'Richard Cory' - Created poems dealing with historic myths and characters. Known primarily for short - ironic characteristics of ordinary individuals. Won 3 Pulitzers : 'Collected Poems -' 'The Man Who Died Twice -' and 'Tristram'
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Claude McKay
Allegory
Transcendentalism
19. Story in which the characters - setting and action represent abstract concepts apart from their literal meaning.
Beat Movement
The Declaration of Independence
Aphorisms
Allegory
20. First great writer of psychological fiction; obsessed with sin and guilt. 'The Scarlet Letter' - 'Young Goodman Brown' - Claimed his work was romance and therefore not required to be realistic.
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Aphorisms
The Declaration of Independence
Edward Teller
21. An artistic and intellectual movement originating in Europe in the late 18th Century and characterized by a heightened interest in nature - emphasis on the individual's expression of emotion and imagination - departure from the attitudes and forms of
Richard Wright
Emile Zola
Romanticism
Rhyme Scheme
22. Third US President Referred to as the 'Sage of Monticello'Drafted the Declaration of Independence.
John Winthrop
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Thomas Jefferson
Three main colonial era poets
23. Wrote 'Howl -' ' Empty Mirror -' and 'Kaddish and Other Poems' - Poet
Richard Wright
James Baldwin
Allen Ginsberg
Anne Sexton
24. Wrote 'Native Son -' and 'Black Boy' - First Black Best-Seller - Staunch Communist : Believed it was black America's best hope for equality.
Emily Dickinson
Transcendental Club
Rhyme
Richard Wright
25. 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.
Imagist Poetry
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Sarah Orne Jewett
Refrain
26. A group of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.
Ezra Pound
Beat Movement
Free Verse
Foot
27. 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
Social Darwinism
Transcendentalism
Henry David Thoreau
Frank Norris
28. (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
William Bradford
Social Darwinism
Countee Cullen
John Winthrop
29. Wrote Catcher in the Rye
J.D Salinger
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Edith Wharton
Phillip Roth
30. People who are best adapted to survive are chosen through the process of natural selection.
Allegory
Loss of Traditional Values
Iambic Pentameter
Darwinism
31. Naturalist - Wrote 'McTeague - a Story of San Francisco'
Thomas Jefferson
Theodore Dreiser
Stanza
Frank Norris
32. 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
Romanticism
Prose
Bret Harte
Modernism
33. Major theme of 20th Century literature.
James Baldwin
Ballad
Nietzscheism
Loss of Traditional Values
34. Southern Gothic writer. Creates stories that simultaneously shock readers and reflect her strong Catholic faith.
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35. The Bard of Harlem; most successful black writer in America during the Harlem Renaissance. Wanted to capture the dominant oral traditions of black culture in written form. Best known for his poetry: 'The Weary Blues -' 'Fields of Wonder -' and 'The D
Blank Verse
Persona
Langston Hughes
Kate Chopin
36. Credited with creating: the modern short story and the detective novel - and the entire genre of mystery. Wrote 'The Philosophy of Composition' - 'The Raven' - 'Tell-Tale Heart -' 'The Cask of Amontillado -' and 'The Gold Bug.' (The first detective
Edgar Allen Poe
Robert Frost
Thomas Jefferson
Samuel Sewall
37. (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
Jonathan Edwards
Alice Walker
Racialism
Carl Sandburg
38. 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
Edith Wharton
Transcendentalism
Three main colonial era poets
Abigail Adams
39. Confessional Poet - Wrote 'Lord Weary's Castle' and 'In Life Studies'
Robert Lowell
Romanticism
Refrain
James Weldon Johnson
40. 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
John Steinbeck
James Thurbur
Ballad
Herman Melville
41. That America's unique identity transcends ethnic - cultural - or religious backgrounds. Idea given by St. Jean de Crevecoeur
Benjamin Franklin
Melting Pot
Thomas Morton
Jack London
42. 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
Carl Sandburg
William Byrd
Robert Lowell
Allen Ginsberg
43. Wrote 'My Antonia' and 'Death Comes for the Archbishop' Won a Pulitzer for her novel 'One of Ours'
Darwinism
T.S Eliot
Iambic Pentameter
Willa Cather
44. 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
Beat Movement
Transcendentalism
Social Darwinism
Bret Harte
45. Literary movement of the 19th century that traced the effects of heredity and environment on people who ere helpless to change their situations. Also called Determinism for its belief in the effects of environment - heredity - and chance on human fat
Melting Pot
Naturalism
Ralph Ellison
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
46. All events follow natural laws.
Langston Hughes
Determinism
James Fenimore Cooper
Stanza
47. A literary argument that aims to change public opinion rather than entertain.
Ballad
Scan
Polemic
Mary Wilkins Freeman
48. Written by Michael Wigglesworth - the most famous poem of 17th Century - proceeds from judgement day to hell and then to paradise. First American Best Seller.
Rhythm
Frederick Douglass
The Day of Doom
Ralph Waldo Emerson
49. First Black female poet to win a Pulitzer. Best known for her poems 'The Bean Eaters' and 'We Real Cool.'
Gwendolyn Brooks
Langston Hughes
J.D Salinger
William Bradford
50. 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.
Frederick Douglass
Blank Verse
Imagist Poetry
W.E.B Du Bois