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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
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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 'Bodies that Matter' and 'Gender Trouble'
(Judith) Butler
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
'Barn Burning' (Faulkner)
(Raymond) Williams
2. Ends: 'Yes - she thought - laying down her brush in extreme fatigue - I have had my vision.'
3. A wealthy and dashing military officer whose love for Anna prompts her to desert her husband and son. He accidentally destroys his beautiful racehorse Frou-Frou - a symbol of Anna.
'The Magic Mountain' (represents the Dionysian principle)
(Alexei) Vronsky
Charles
'The Fall' (Camus)
4. Set in the working class tenements of Dublin in the early 1920s - during the Irish Civil War period - it concerns the Boyle family.
5. Native American novelist and poet.
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
Reeve'S Tale
'A Death in the Family' (Agee)
Louise Erdrich
6. A beautiful - aristocratic married woman whose pursuit of love and emotional honesty makes her an outcast from society. Her adulterous affair catapults her into social exile - misery - and finally suicide.
(Arkady) Svidrigailov
(Raymond) Williams
Andromache
Anna Karenina
7. Concerns intellectual man named Humphrey van Weyden - who is forced to become tough and self-reliant by exposure to cruelty and brutality. The story starts with him aboard a San Francisco ferry - called Martinez - which collides with another ship in
8. 'The postmodern condition' and 'The collapse of the grand narrative'
Lyotard
'The Plough and the Stars' (O'Casey)
'Who'S Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' (Albee)
(Barbara) Pym
9. 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.
Alceste
Alexei (Karenin)
(Raymond) Williams
'The Lower Depths' (Maxim Gorki)
10. Emma Clery and Belvedere
11. Best known for his analysis of interpretive communities — an offshoot of reader-response criticism.
(Stanley) Fish
'The Black Sheep' (Balzac)
Racine
'The Hairy Ape' (O'Neil)
12. Old Mahon and Pegeen Mike
13. Tells the love of Orestes and Hermione - who is betrothed to Pyrrhus.
14. The play tells the story of a childless woman living in rural Spain. Her desperate desire for motherhood becomes an obsession that eventually drives her to commit a horrific crime. Her desperation is driven by the social norms of her culture - and th
15. Dystopian novel by Jack London
16. Two students - John and Alan - cuckold a miller.
17. A novel about miserliness - and how it is bequeathed from the father to the daughter through her unsatisfying love attachment with her cousin.
18. 'The Heresy of Paraphrase' - Wrote 'The Well Wrought Urn' and 'Understanding Poetry'
Alceste
(Judith) Butler
'The Awakening'
(Cleanth) Brooks
19. An aristocratic woman. The protagonist of 'The Cherry Orchard.'
(Stanley) Fish
(Lyubov) Ranevskaya
'It Can'T Happen Here' (Lewis)
'Hedda Gabler'
20. Subaltern - strategic essentialism
(Jean) Racine
'The Plough and the Stars' (O'Casey)
(Gayatri) Spivak
Geneva School
21. Vasili'S cold - imperious - and beautiful daughter - who seduces Pierre into marriage - only to take up with another man immediately. She has affairs with many men - including her brother Anatole. Though known in social circles as a witty woman - she
22. Set in Oran - Main characters: Joseph Grand and Raymond Rambert - Cottard and Tarrou
23. The illegitimate son of a wealthy count - who upon receiving an unexpected inheritance is suddenly burdened with responsibility and conflict. His former carefree behavior vanishes and he enters upon a philosophical quest of how one should live a mora
'The Stranger' (Camus)
'A Handful of Dust' (Waugh)
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
Pierre Bezukhov
24. 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.
'Nausea' (Sartre)
Flaubert
'The Rose Tattoo' (Williams)
'The Lady with the Dog' (Chekhov)
25. Ends: 'Who knows but that - on the lower frequencies - I speak for you?'
26. Eilif - Kattrin - and Swiss Cheese
27. 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
28. Mynheer Peeperkorn
29. Wrote 'The Sandbox -' a universal failure.
'The Magic Mountain' (represent duty and love/temptation)
Albee
'Andromaque' (Racine)
Dr. Rieux
30. The Kafka-influenced novel concerns a dejected researcher who becomes convinced that inanimate objects and situations encroach on his ability to define himself - on his intellectual and spiritual freedom. The protagonist is Antoine Roquentin - Anna
31. After the death of her second husband an imperious mother imposes a period of mourning on her five daughters to last eight years - as has been traditional in her family.
32. The Patna and Patusan - Begins: 'Stately - plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead - bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed.' Begins: 'All this happened - more or less'
33. Wrote 'Irony as a Principle of Structure'
'Middlemarch'
Cleanth Brooks
Anna Karenina
(Sean) O'Casey
34. Wrote 'Allegories of Reading' and 'The Resistance to Theory' - Wrote 'Semiology and Rhetoric'
(Paul) de Man
'The Lady with the Dog' (Chekhov)
'The Cherry Orchard' (Chekhov)
Foucault
35. Dunya'S depraved yet generous former employer who attempts to rape her.
Pierre Bezukhov
(Arkady) Svidrigailov
'The Brothers Karamazov' (their father and the monk)
Anna Karenina
36. Among other artists - he specifically condemns Wagner and Beethoven as examples of overly cerebral artists - who lack real emotion. Furthermore - the Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven) - cannot claim to be able to 'infect' their audience—as it pretends—with
37. 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
38. In 1940s Mexico - an ex-minister - Reverend T. Lawrence Shannon - has been locked out of his church after characterizing the Occidental image of God as a 'Senile delinquent' - during one of his sermons - Hannah Jelkes
39. Wrote 'The Flowers of Evil' - He influenced a whole generation of poets with his highly original style of prose-poetry - and even coined the term 'modernity.'
Baudelaire
'Madame Bovary' (Flaubert)
(John) Barth
'The Iron Heel'
40. Begins: 'If I am out of my mind - it'S all right with me.'
41. 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
42. Breakthrough Native American novel. The protagonist is Abel.
43. Reification and class consciousness - Wrote 'The Theory of the Novel' and 'The Historical Novel'
Julia Kristeva
'The Glass Menagerie'
'The Magic Mountain' (represent humanism and radicalism)
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
44. 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
45. Poet and critic who wrote 'Seven Types of Ambiguity'
(Cleanth) Brooks
metaphysics of presence (Derrida)
'Mother Courage and Her Children' (Brecht)
(William) Empson
46. Set in Amsterdam - it consists of a series of second-person dramatic monologues of a penitent judge.
47. Daughter of Menelaus and Helen
'No Exit' (Sartre)
Hermione
Andromache
'The Red and the Black' (Stendhal)
48. Garcin - Inez - and Estelle
49. Achilles' son
Pyrrhus
(Stanley) Fish
'Three Sisters'
'Ceremony' (Silko)
50. The grandson of the king of Judah who is restored to the throne.