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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. First Black female poet to win a Pulitzer. Best known for her poems 'The Bean Eaters' and 'We Real Cool.'
Gwendolyn Brooks
Scientism
Gothic
Ezra Pound
2. 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
William Bradford
Washington Irving
Nativism
Langston Hughes
3. Applying the evolutionary 'survival of the fittest' concept to a world marked by struggle and competition. (Promulgated by Herbert Spencer - a best-selling sociologist of the late 19th Century.
Dorthy Parker
Bret Harte
Aphorisms
Social Darwinism
4. Wished to return to more primitive principles - to simplicity - sobriety - religious earnestness - and personal self-control. Aim was to purify church of England from 'Popery' - Persecuted harshly by Charles I and Archbishop of Canterbury William Lau
Narrative Poem
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Determinism
Social Darwinism
5. 'The Old Man and the Sea -' 'The Sun Also Rises -' 'A Farewell to Arms -' and 'For Whom the Bell Tolls.' Writing style emphasizes: Short sentences - brief paragraphs - active verbs - authenticity - compression - clarity - and immediacy. Produced some
Ernest Hemmingway
Verse
Jack London
Persona
6. 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.
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
John Steinbeck
e.e cummings
Nathaniel Hawthorne
7. The beat or rhythm of a poem - created by a pattern of stressed an unstressed syllables.
Stanza
John Adams
Frank Norris
Meter
8. Chicago School - Work bridges folk poetry and modernist poems. Used music and strong rhythm - Wrote 'The Congo'
Wonders of the Invisible World
William Faulkner
Iambic Pentameter
Vachel Lindsay
9. 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.
Beat Writers
Claude McKay
Harriet Beecher Stowe
The Declaration of Independence
10. 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
Allegory
Walt Whitman
e.e cummings
Nathaniel Hawthorne
11. America's most popular humorist in the 30s and 40s. Frequently explored the battle of the sexes. Wrote 'The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.'
Robert Frost
Ralph Ellison
Thomas Morton
James Thurbur
12. 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
Romanticism
Bret Harte
W.E.B Du Bois
Wonders of the Invisible World
13. Pilgrim's constitution. Shaped the politics - religion - and social behavior of the first settlers. Eventually influenced the shape - style and content of the U.S Constitution. William Bradford was famous for being one of the authors and signers.
Mayflower Compact
Willa Cather
Allen Ginsberg
William Byrd
14. Wrote 'Portnoy's Complaint.' Work reflects the changing attitude of Jews living in post-World War II America.
Jack Kerouac
Phillip Roth
Edward Teller
Gwendolyn Brooks
15. Ben Franklin paid his passage to America. First Pamphlet was Common Sense : credited with getting the colonists to see the 'advantage - necessity - and obligation' of breaking with Britain. Followed by a series of pamphlets - collectively called 'An
Richard Wright
Robert Lowell
Transcendental Club
Thomas Paine
16. Considered the voice of the Twenties. Wrote 'The Great Gatsby' - Heavy drinking problem.
Polemic
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Beat Movement
17. 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
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Allen Ginsberg
Rhyme
Stanza
18. Unrhymed poetry Captures natural rhythm of speech.
Toni Morrison
Sarah Orne Jewett
Blank Verse
Polemic
19. 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
Bret Harte
Ralph Ellison
Nietzscheism
Rhythm
20. Greatest poet of American colonial period. Influenced T.S Elliot - Ezra Pound - and other modern-day metaphysical poets. Defined 'American'
Ezra Pound
Maya Angelou
Social Darwinism
Edward Teller
21. Wrote 'The House of Mirth -' and 'The Age of Innocence' most famous for 'Ethan Frome' Noted use of indirection and allusion. First women to win a Pulitzer for 'The Age of Innocence' Main themes were upper-class life and the constraints it placed on b
James Fenimore Cooper
W.E.B Du Bois
Edith Wharton
Nietzscheism
22. Wrote 'My Antonia' and 'Death Comes for the Archbishop' Won a Pulitzer for her novel 'One of Ours'
William Byrd
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
William S. Burroughs
Willa Cather
23. 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
Washington Irving
Benjamin Franklin
Prose
James Fenimore Cooper
24. (Colonial Period) First writer of American Literature. Wrote 'The Generall Historie of Virginia - New England - and The Summer Isles.' Archetypal American.
John Smith
Monologue
Ballad
The Declaration of Independence
25. 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.
Zora Neal Hurston
James Thurbur
Gothic
Cotton Mather
26. A regular pattern of words that end with the same sound.
Edward Teller
Rhyme Scheme
Thomas Morton
F. Scott Fitzgerald
27. (Colonial Period) Only person to publicly repent his part in the Salem Witch Trials. Published America's first anti-slavery tract.
Determinism
Atavism
Anne Sexton
Samuel Sewall
28. A false science that argued tat different human races possessed distinguishing traits that determined their particular behavior and achievement in society.
Realism
Racialism
Thomas Morton
W.E.B Du Bois
29. 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.
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Rhyme
Determinism
William Faulkner
30. The process of reading a poem to figure out it's meter.
Social Darwinism
Modernism
Scan
Stephen Crane
31. Written by Cottonn Mather - to justify the execution of 19 women during the Salem Witch Trials.
Meter
Robert Frost
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Wonders of the Invisible World
32. 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.
Transcendental Club
e.e cummings
Loss of Traditional Values
Broadside
33. 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.
Willa Cather
Frank Norris
Loss of Traditional Values
Zora Neal Hurston
34. Major theme of 20th Century literature.
Anne Sexton
Allen Ginsberg
Loss of Traditional Values
Rhythm
35. Genius; called the 'Black Keats' - Worked within traditional poetic forms rather than jazz rhythms. Wrote ' Copper Sun -' and 'The Ballad of the Brown Girl.'
Thomas Morton
Frank Norris
Ezra Pound
Countee Cullen
36. A stanza.
Verse
Booker T. Washington
Rhythm
Scientism
37. 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
Toni Morrison
John Adams
Racialism
38. (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
Verse
Ralph Ellison
Puritan Poetry
The 3 primary literary genres
39. Wrote 'Native Son -' and 'Black Boy' - First Black Best-Seller - Staunch Communist : Believed it was black America's best hope for equality.
Loss of Traditional Values
Polemic
Modernism
Richard Wright
40. 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.
Narrative Poem
James Fenimore Cooper
Rhyme Scheme
Atavism
41. The idea that there is something different - unique and special about Americans.
Jonathan Edwards
Meter
American Adam
Free Verse
42. (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
The Day of Doom
Jonathan Edwards
Transcendentalism
Edith Wharton
43. New England local color writer - is known primarily for her two collections of stories. 'A Humble Romance' and 'A New England Nun'
Robert Frost
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Edgar Lee Masters
Cotton Mather
44. (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 Morton
Claude McKay
Three main colonial era poets
Lyres
45. 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
Allegory
John Smith
Nathaniel Hawthorne
46. Wrote 'Songs of Jamaica' - Poetry and 'Harlem Shadows' (first great literary achievement of the Harlem Renaissance. Much of his poetry evokes the rich heritage of Jamaica.
Broadside
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Claude McKay
Beat Writers
47. 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
Frank Norris
Carl Sandburg
James Weldon Johnson
Puritan Poetry
48. 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
Genteel Tradition
Herman Melville
Saul Bellow
Gwendolyn Brooks
49. A literary mask a writer assumes for the purpose of creating a character in a poem.
Polemic
Persona
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Sonnet
50. Stylistic Elements Parallel Structure: repeated used of phrases - clauses - or sentences that are similar in structure. Rhythm - Forceful and Direct Language
The Declaration of Independence
Emily Dickinson
Darwinism
Scan