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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. Genius; called the 'Black Keats' - Worked within traditional poetic forms rather than jazz rhythms. Wrote ' Copper Sun -' and 'The Ballad of the Brown Girl.'
Countee Cullen
Iambic Pentameter
American Adam
Kate Chopin
2. The process of reading a poem to figure out it's meter.
Zora Neal Hurston
Drama
William Byrd
Scan
3. 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
Jack London
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Cotton Mather
Erica Jong
4. New England local color writer - is known primarily for her two collections of stories. 'A Humble Romance' and 'A New England Nun'
Robert Lowell
Mary Wilkins Freeman
John Winthrop
Dorthy Parker
5. 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.
Sarah Orne Jewett
Beat Movement
Free Verse
The Day of Doom
6. Chicago School - Work bridges folk poetry and modernist poems. Used music and strong rhythm - Wrote 'The Congo'
Jack Kerouac
Determinism
Vachel Lindsay
Wonders of the Invisible World
7. First Black woman to win the Nobel Prize for literature. Novel focus on black cultural identity in contemporary America. Wrote 'The Bluest Eye -' 'Tar Baby -' and 'Beloved'
Toni Morrison
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Cotton Mather
Romanticism
8. 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
Mayflower Compact
Romanticism
Flannery O'Connor
Edwin Arlington Robinson
9. Book of feline poems - 'Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats -' formed the basis of the Broadway hit 'Cats.' Wrote 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock - Published 'The Waste-Land' which became the most famous poem of the first half of the 20th Centur
Countee Cullen
Carl Sandburg
T.S Eliot
John Winthrop
10. America's most popular humorist in the 30s and 40s. Frequently explored the battle of the sexes. Wrote 'The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.'
Beat Movement
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Thomas Morton
James Thurbur
11. (Colonial Period) First writer of American Literature. Wrote 'The Generall Historie of Virginia - New England - and The Summer Isles.' Archetypal American.
The Day of Doom
Racialism
Free Verse
John Smith
12. Local Colorist Wrote 'The Awakening' Writing is memorable for its : Vivid and economical style - Rich Local Dialect - and Penetrating view of the culture of South Louisiana.
Frederick Douglass
James Baldwin
Kate Chopin
Romanticism
13. (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
Herman Melville
Loss of Traditional Values
Determinism
Thomas Morton
14. Produces ribald - exuberant - feminist poems - novels and essays. Most famous novel is 'Fear of Flying.'
Erica Jong
Dorthy Parker
Thomas Paine
Nietzscheism
15. A single sheet of paper printed on one or both sides. 'The Dying Redcoat'
Wonders of the Invisible World
Emile Zola
Broadside
Cotton Mather
16. Stylistic Elements Parallel Structure: repeated used of phrases - clauses - or sentences that are similar in structure. Rhythm - Forceful and Direct Language
Willa Cather
End Rhyme vs Internal Rhyme
William Faulkner
The Declaration of Independence
17. Unorthodox writers who hung around the bars and coffee houses of San Francisco's North Beach.
James Thurbur
Wonders of the Invisible World
Cotton Mather
Beat Writers
18. 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.
James Fenimore Cooper
Claude McKay
Nietzscheism
James Weldon Johnson
19. Prose - Poetry - Drama
The 3 primary literary genres
Modernism
Puritan Poetry
Flannery O'Connor
20. Famous for writing - marriages - divorces and media hype. Wrote 'The Executioner's Song.'
Norman Mailer
James Weldon Johnson
Willa Cather
Stephen Crane
21. A piece of literature intended to be performed in front of an audience.
Determinism
Benjamin Franklin
Drama
Anne Sexton
22. All written work that is not poetry - drama or song. Articles - autobiographies - biographies - essays - novels and editorials are prose.
Refrain
Sonnet
Prose
Frederick Douglass
23. 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
Thomas Paine
Narrative Poem
Poetry
Abigail Adams
24. Naturalist - Wrote 'McTeague - a Story of San Francisco'
Ernest Hemmingway
Drama
Frank Norris
Gothic
25. Unrhymed poetry Captures natural rhythm of speech.
Scientism
Blank Verse
Zora Neal Hurston
W.E.B Du Bois
26. 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
Ballad
Transcendental Club
Robert Lowell
Henry James
27. Used to describe literature that was pandered to the polite - refined - and delicate elements of society. Denied the unsavory underbelly of life.
Genteel Tradition
Ernest Hemmingway
Henry James
Racialism
28. 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'
Harriet Beecher Stowe
William S. Burroughs
Countee Cullen
James Thurbur
29. 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
Sonnet
Polemic
Sylvia Plath
Ezra Pound
30. (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
William Bradford
Benjamin Franklin
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
Determinism
31. (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
Henry James
Loss of Traditional Values
Jonathan Edwards
Robert Lowell
32. 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
Toni Morrison
Ballad
Broadside
33. Pattern of five feet (groups of syllables) - each having one unstressed syllable and one stressed syllable.
Iambic Pentameter
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
Modernism
Norman Mailer
34. 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.
Gothic
Genteel Tradition
Henry David Thoreau
Nativism
35. 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
Imagist Poetry
Genteel Tradition
Washington Irving
Edgar Allen Poe
36. Recluse - agoraphobic - Didn't title her poems. All are designated by numbers. Paved the way for the Imagist movement of the 1920s. Considered on of the founders of Modern American Poetry. Concrete imagery - forceful language - and unique style usher
Carl Sandburg
Thomas Jefferson
Emily Dickinson
Jack London
37. A stanza.
Verse
Broadside
Edith Wharton
John Winthrop
38. People who sang lyrics as they played string-like instruments.
Edgar Lee Masters
Lyres
Jean Toomer
Polemic
39. 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.'
Washington Irving
Kate Chopin
End Rhyme vs Internal Rhyme
Epic Story
40. Wrote 'The Red Badge of Courage' and 'Maggie: A Girl of the Streets -' and 'The Open Boat.' Red Badge of Courage is considered the first modern war novel. Work is celebrated for its images and symbolism. Work is often described as impressionist due t
Narrative Poem
Stephen Crane
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Two Most Famous Poets of the 20th Century
41. Wrote 'The Invisible Man' - Considered a landmark achievement in American literature
Jean Toomer
Meter
Langston Hughes
Ralph Ellison
42. First vice president and second president. Member of the First and Second Continental Congresses. Helped draft the Declaration of Independence. Husband of Abigail Adams.
William Byrd
Herman Melville
John Adams
Sarah Orne Jewett
43. Story in which the characters - setting and action represent abstract concepts apart from their literal meaning.
Scientism
James Thurbur
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Allegory
44. A type of literature win which words are selected and strung together for their beauty - sound - and power to express feelings.
Poetry
Flannery O'Connor
Richard Wright
Sylvia Plath
45. Wrote 'The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man' and 'Lift Every Voice and Sing -' (The Black National Anthem)
Richard Wright
Robert Lowell
Harriet Beecher Stowe
James Weldon Johnson
46. Greatest poet of American colonial period. Influenced T.S Elliot - Ezra Pound - and other modern-day metaphysical poets. Defined 'American'
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Edward Teller
Puritans (Saints - Separatists)
Frank Norris
47. A literary mask a writer assumes for the purpose of creating a character in a poem.
Emily Dickinson
Theodore Dreiser
Iambic Pentameter
Persona
48. Confessional Poet - Wrote 'Lord Weary's Castle' and 'In Life Studies'
Thomas Paine
Racialism
Robert Lowell
Edwin Arlington Robinson
49. Wrote 'Portnoy's Complaint.' Work reflects the changing attitude of Jews living in post-World War II America.
John Smith
Dorthy Parker
Phillip Roth
Norman Mailer
50. 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.
Nativism
Anne Sexton
Gothic
Vachel Lindsay