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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Literature: World Literature
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Subjects
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gre
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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. Wrote 'The New Criticism'
(John Crowe) Ransom
Frye
Auerbach
'Darkness at Noon' (Koestler)
2. The protagonist of 'The Red and the Black' - Contains the epitaph 'The truth - the harsh truth - Mathilde de la Mole - Madame de Rênal and M. Pirard - A sociological satire of the French social order under the Bourbon Restoration
Julien Sorel
'Brideshead Revisited' (Waugh)
Baudelaire
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
3. Valentin Voloshinov and Terry Eagleton -
Marxist (criticism)
Charles
Julia Kristeva
'Madame Bovary' (Flaubert)
4. 'The postmodern condition' and 'The collapse of the grand narrative'
Lyotard
(Elaine) Showalter
Ionesco
Tolstoy ('What is Art?')
5. Dystopian novel by Jack London
6. Claire and Solange
7. It tells the story of the Bridau family (Phillipe and Joseph) - trying to regain their lost inheritance after a series of unfortunate mishaps.
8. Concerns the son of the Roman emperor Claudius - whose succession to the imperial throne is usurped by Lucius - later known as Nero - and the son of Claudius' wife Agrippina the Younger.
9. Wrote 'Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature' and 'Contingency - Irony - and Solidarity' - ironism - final vocabulary - and postphilosophy
'Lolita' (her real name)
'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' (Kundera)
(Richard) Rorty
'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' (Williams)
10. Two students - John and Alan - cuckold a miller.
11. Daughter of Menelaus and Helen
Hermione
'A Handful of Dust' (Waugh)
'Loving' (Henry Green)
'The Maids' (Genet)
12. Wrote 'The Blacks' and 'The Maids'
Jean Genet
Auerbach
Marxist (criticism)
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
13. A historical psychological novel in two volumes - chronicling an aesthete carpenter'S son and his attempts to socially rise beyond his plebeian upbringing with a combination of talent and hard work - deception and hypocrisy — yet who ultimately allow
14. Wrote 'Irony as a Principle of Structure'
Auerbach
Cleanth Brooks
'Lord Jim' (Conrad)
'Barn Burning' (Faulkner)
15. I have been performing tricks for you. That'S how I've survived. You wanted it like that. You and Papa have done me a great wrong. It'S because of you I've made nothing of my life.
16. Wrote 'Culture and Society' and 'The Country and the City'
(Raymond) Williams
Alexei (Karenin)
'Loving' (Henry Green)
'Lost Illusions' (Balzac)
17. Aside from presenting a detailed account of the life and land of the Mojave desert - each story and essay includes at least one of three themes: the supremacy and divinity of nature - the negative consequences of the disconnect between humans and nat
18. The narrator of 'Lolita'
'Falconer' (Cheever)
(Paul) de Man
'The Land of Little Rain' (Mary Austin)
Humbert Humbert
19. Tomas and Tereza
20. Set during the 30 Years' War - it concerns the dreadfulness of war and the idea that virtues are not rewarded in corrupt times. He used an epic structure so that the audience focuses on the issues being displayed rather than getting involved with the
21. Dunya'S depraved yet generous former employer who attempts to rape her.
'Lord Jim' (Conrad)
'Invisible Man'
(Arkady) Svidrigailov
Wimsatt and Beardsley
22. Ejlert Lovborg and Thea Elsted
23. Proposed that when we attribute motives to others - we tend to rely on ratios between 5 elements: act - scene - agent - agency - and purpose. This has become known as the dramatistic pentad. Wrote 'Permanence and Change' and 'A Grammar of Motives' -
'The Zoo Story' (Albee)
Alceste
(Kenneth) Burke
'No Exit' (Sartre)
24. Wrote 'Epistemology of the Closet' and 'Between Men'
'Parade'S End' (Ford - a tetralogy)
Sedgwick (Queer theory)
(Paul) de Man
'Crime and Punishment'
25. Heterotopia and parrhesia - 'Regimes of truth' and 'Surveillance' - 'gaze' and 'archive'
26. The Mickey Mouse Club and the MagiPeel Peeler
27. The oldest brother. Passionate and intemperate - easily swept away by emotions and enthusiasms - as he demonstrates when he loses interest in his fiancée Katerina and falls madly in love with Grushenka. Cursed with a violent temper - Dmitri is plague
28. A novel about miserliness - and how it is bequeathed from the father to the daughter through her unsatisfying love attachment with her cousin.
29. It concerns the romantic and artistic conflicts between four characters: an ingenue - a fading actress - her son the symbolist playwright - and a famous middlebrow story writer. The play has a strong intertextual relationship with 'Hamelet.'
30. Concerns a woman - Oedipa Maas - possibly unearthing the centuries-old conflict between two mail distribution companies - Thurn und Taxis and the Trystero
31. (His lawyer and best friend) Mr. Jaggers and Herbert Pocket - (the convict and Pip'S worst enemy) - Abel Magwitch and Bentley Drummel
32. Charles Ryder and Lord Sebastian Flyte
33. Opens opens in a country store - which is doubling as a Justice of the Peace Court. A hungry boy named Sarty Snopes craves the meat and cheese in the store.
34. Anna Karenina'S husband. Formal - duty-bound - and cowed by social convention - he constantly presents a flawless facade of a cultivated and capable man.
'The Darling' (Chekhov)
Pierre Bezukhov
Alyosha ('The Brothers Karamazov')
Alexei (Karenin)
35. Breakthrough Native American novel. The protagonist is Abel.
36. A master of epic theatre and the 'distancing effect.'
(Jean) Moreas
(Bertolt) Brecht
Dr. Rieux
(Georges) Poulet
37. Parnell and Cranly
38. Wrote 'The Laugh of the Medusa'
Sartre
(Hélène) Cixous
'The Death of Ivan Illych' (Tolstoy)
Platon (Karataev) ('War and Peace')
39. The protagonist of 'The Magic Mountain'
Hans (Castorp)
'Parade'S End' (Ford - a tetralogy)
'Eugenie Grandet' (Balzac)
'Pere Goriot' (Goriot'S daughters)
40. Most of the action takes place in an upmarket brothel that functions as a microcosm of the regime of the establishment under threat outside. Includes meta-theatricality and role-playing consisting of two central strands: a political conflict between
41. It describes life above and below stairs in an Irish country house during the Second World War. In the absence of their employers the Tennants - the servants enact their own battles and conflict amid rumors about the war in Europe; invading one anoth
42. The protagonist of 'The Mill on the Floss.' Her brother is Tom.
'Wuthering Heights'
'The Hairy Ape' (O'Neil)
Maggie Tulliver
Hans (Castorp)
43. Wrote 'Allegories of Reading' and 'The Resistance to Theory' - Wrote 'Semiology and Rhetoric'
'Disgrace' (Coetzee)
'The Playboy of the Western World' (Synge)
(Paul) de Man
'The Cherry Orchard' (Chekhov)
44. Her novels are more notable for their style and characterisation than for their plots. A superficial reading gives the impression that they are sketches of village or suburban life - and comedies of manners - studying the social activities connected
'Three Lives' (Stein)
(Barbara) Pym
'Mother Courage and Her Children' (Brecht)
Jean Genet
45. Gynocriticsm - 'Toward a Feminist Poetics'
Sedgwick (Queer theory)
(Georges) Poulet
(Elaine) Showalter
'Falconer' (Cheever)
46. Distinguished between the semiotic and the symbolic - intertextuality and abjection - Wrote 'Powers of Horror' - Wrote 'From One Identity to Another' and 'Women'S Time'
Julia Kristeva
Albee
'The Magic Mountain' (represent duty and love/temptation)
'Miss Julie' (Strindberg)
47. Dolores Haze
48. Beautiful - accomplished - lively - spontaneous - and charming - she begins the novel as a willful and exuberant teenager and ends it as a happily married to Pierre. Her crush on Anatole costs her a chance with Andrew - who cannot forgive her lapse.
49. The protagonist of 'The Stranger'
(Ursula) Le Guin
'No Exit' (Sartre)
Meursault
'The Magic Mountain' (represent duty and love/temptation)
50. A retelling of the story of Phaedra - Theseus - and Hippolyte.