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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. It describes the exploits of a discharged U.S. Navy sailor named Benny Profane - his reconnection in New York with a group of pseudo-bohemian artists known as the Whole Sick Crew - and the quest of an aging traveller named Herbert Stencil to identify
2. 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
3. Achilles' son
Baudelaire
Pyrrhus
Auerbach
'Athalie' (Racine)
4. A gentleman'S debating club founded by Ben Franklin.
'The Fall' (Camus)
Dr. Rieux
Junto
'It Can'T Happen Here' (Lewis)
5. The protagonist and 'misanthrope' of the title. He is quick to criticize the flaws of everyone around him - including himself. He cannot help but love Célimène though he loathes her behaviour.
'The Plough and the Stars' (O'Casey)
Alceste
'Miss Julie' (Strindberg)
'The Five-Forty-Eight' (Cheever)
6. 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
(Barbara) Pym
'Crime and Punishment'
'Remembrance of Things Past' (Proust)
(Bertolt) Brecht
7. A flirtatious - witty - young socialite who sends identical love letters to Alceste - Oronte - Acaste - and Clitandre.
8. Known for his combination of realism and romanticism and his dedication to finding 'le mot juste' ('The right word') - which he considered has the key mean to achieve quality in literary art.
Flaubert
(Barbara) Pym
'The Lady with the Dog' (Chekhov)
Pierre Bezukhov
9. Dunya'S depraved yet generous former employer who attempts to rape her.
(Arkady) Svidrigailov
Dmitri ('The Brothers Karamazov')
'Great Expectations'
'Lost Illusions' (Balzac)
10. The Mickey Mouse Club and the MagiPeel Peeler
11. Raskolnikov'S love who is forced to prostitute herself to support herself and the rest of her family. She is meek and easily embarrassed - but she maintains a strong religious faith.
Sonya (Marmeladov)
'The Maids' (Genet)
(Paul) de Man
'The House of Bernarda Alba' (Lorca)
12. Saintly character who represents the ideal of the simple - life-affirming philosophy of the Russian peasantry
13. Wrote 'The Myth of Sisyphus' and 'The Rebel'
(Countess) Natasha Rostov ('War and Peace')
'The Death of Ivan Illych' (Tolstoy)
Camus
'The Black Sheep' (Balzac)
14. His plays are generally considered untranslatable.
Racine
'Eugenie Grandet' (Balzac)
(John Crowe) Ransom
'Parade'S End' (Ford - a tetralogy)
15. Distinguished between the semiotic and the symbolic - intertextuality and abjection - Wrote 'Powers of Horror' - Wrote 'From One Identity to Another' and 'Women'S Time'
Cleanth Brooks
Julia Kristeva
(Countess) Natasha Rostov ('War and Peace')
'Barn Burning' (Faulkner)
16. It tells the story of Ezekiel Farragut - a university professor and drug addict who is serving time in a State Prison for the murder of his brother. Farragut struggles to retain his humanity in the prison environment - and begins an affair with a fel
17. A brilliant student with an incisively analytical mind - and his intelligence is directly to blame for his descent into despair. Unable to reconcile the horror of unjust human suffering—particularly the suffering of children—with the idea of a loving
18. Set partially in the Berghof sanatorium.
19. Heterglossia and dialogism - chronotope - exotopy - utterance and unfinalizability
Bakhtin
'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' (Kundera)
'Lord Jim' (Conrad)
'Juno and the Paycock' (O'Casey)
20. Concerns a writer who becomes ill and confronts the duality of life: follow the path of logic and reason (Apollo) or follow the path of passion (Dionysus). He becomes obsessed with a young boy who he believes represents the latter. The protagonist is
21. Wrote 'Anatomy of Criticism' and 'The Well-Tempered Critic' - 'centripetal' and 'centrifugal'
(Prince) Andrei Bolkonski ('War and Peace')
Frye
(John Crowe) Ransom
'The Stranger' (Camus)
22. James and Edward Tyrone
23. The narrator - K. - arrives in a village governed by a mysterious bureaucracy - Frieda and Klamm
24. 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.'
25. Criminal who also goes by Trompe-la-Mort - Jacques Collin - and Abbé Herrera
'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' (Williams)
Vautrin
'Lord Jim' (Conrad)
'The Plague' (Camus)
26. The 'Intentional' and 'Affective' Fallacies
'Brideshead Revisited' (Waugh)
'The Plague' (Camus)
Wimsatt and Beardsley
(Gayatri) Spivak
27. Best known for his analysis of interpretive communities — an offshoot of reader-response criticism.
'The Night of the Iguana' (Williams)
(Stanley) Fish
'Rabbit - Run' (Updike)
Sonya (Marmeladov)
28. Eilif - Kattrin - and Swiss Cheese
29. Valentin Voloshinov and Terry Eagleton -
(Alexei) Vronsky
'A Handful of Dust' (Waugh)
Marxist (criticism)
(Michel) Foucault
30. Subaltern - strategic essentialism
(Gayatri) Spivak
Maggie Tulliver
'Middlemarch'
'The Magic Mountain' (Mann)
31. Poet and critic who wrote 'Seven Types of Ambiguity'
Rastignac
Camus
(William) Empson
Julien Sorel
32. The husband of Emma Bovary.
'Madame Bovary' (Flaubert)
(Paul) de Man
Charles
Kitty (Ekaterina) ('Anna Karenina')
33. Ends: 'The growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life - and rest in unvisited tombs.'
34. Joad and Abner.
35. Set in Yonville. She has a highly romanticized view of the world and craves beauty - wealth - passion - and high society. It is the disparity between these romantic ideals and the realities of her country life that impels her to commit adultery and a
'The School for Wives' (Moliere)
'Lost Illusions' (Balzac)
Julia Kristeva
Emma Bovary (Roualt)
36. Joachim Ziemssen and Clavdia Chauchat
37. Wrote 'The Roads to Freedom -' a WWII triology about Mathieu - a socialist teacher of philosophy and somewhat of a stand-in for the author.
'The Land of Little Rain' (Mary Austin)
Sartre
'Britannicus' (Racine)
'Middlemarch'
38. 'The Camera Eye' sections are written in stream of consciousness technique and add up to an autobiographical Künstlerroman. Narrates the lives of twelve characters in free indirect speech.
39. Concerns a man who is so intimidated by femininity that he resolves to marry his young - naïve ward and proceeds to make clumsy advances to this purpose. The final act introduces a powerful irony as Oronte and Enrique arrive on the scene and announce
40. It satirizes the British landed gentry and mercantile class. The novel is set in the 1930s - and focuses on the breakdown of the marriage of Tony and Brenda Last
41. Emma Clery and Belvedere
42. Tells the love of Orestes and Hermione - who is betrothed to Pyrrhus.
43. Concerns a young poet trying to make a name for himself - who becomes trapped in the morass of society's darkest contradiction - Lucien de Rubempré - Eve Chardon - David
44. David Lurie is a professor of English at a technical university in Cape Town who seduces a student and loses everything: his reputation - his job - his peace of mind - his good looks - his dreams of artistic success - and finally even his ability to
45. Set in the sitting room of a plantation home in the Mississippi Delta of Big Daddy Pollitt - a wealthy cotton tycoon - Big Daddy Pollitt - Brick and Maggie
46. He is a pompous speechmaker - endlessly rattling on about medical techniques and theories that he really knows nothing about. His presence serves - in part - to heighten our sense of Emma'S frustration with her life.
(Monsieur) Homais
'Long Day'S Journey into Night' (O'Neil)
Harry Angstrom
Camus
47. Set in the working class tenements of Dublin in the early 1920s - during the Irish Civil War period - it concerns the Boyle family.
48. The daughter of King Minos and wife of Theseus.
'The Trial' (Kafka)
'The Glass Menagerie'
'A Death in the Family' (Agee)
Phaedra
49. Dmitri Razumikhin and Katerina Ivanova
50. Two married couples - one twenty years older and bitterer than the other - engage in an evening of merciless personal attack - George and Martha - Nick and Honey