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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Literature: World Literature
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Subjects
:
gre
,
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. Jack and Nora Clitheroe - The final acts take place on the Easter Rising of 1916.
2. A young law student who seems to share Emma'S appreciation for the finer things in life - and who returns her admiration
'It Can'T Happen Here' (Lewis)
Leon (Dupris)
'Phedre' (Racine)
'The Plough and the Stars' (O'Casey)
3. The play concerns an aristocratic Russian woman and her family as they return to the family'S estate just before it is auctioned to pay the mortgage. While presented with options to save the estate - the family essentially does nothing and the play e
4. Epistolary novel (letters sent to Wilhelm) set in the fictional village of Wahlheim
5. Wrote 'Irony as a Principle of Structure'
Cleanth Brooks
'The Playboy of the Western World' (Synge)
(Jean-Baptiste) Clamence
'The Awakening'
6. Saintly character who represents the ideal of the simple - life-affirming philosophy of the Russian peasantry
7. 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
8. 'The postmodern condition' and 'The collapse of the grand narrative'
'Andromaque' (Racine)
'Invisible Man'
Lyotard
'Phedre' (Racine)
9. (A lawyer and a painter) Herr Huld and Titorelli
10. Wrote exclusively in Alexandrine. His dramaturgy is marked by his psychological insight - the prevailing passion of his characters - a strong Jansensist sense of fate - and the nakedness of both the plot and stage.
'A Doll'S House'
(Jean) Racine
'Desire Under the Elms' (O'Neil)
Platon (Karataev) ('War and Peace')
11. Tells the tale of Rubashov - an Old Bolshevik and October Revolutionary who is cast out - imprisoned - and tried for treason against the very Soviet Union he once helped to create.
12. Most of it is a thirty-year flashback. Peter Ivanovich - Gerasim
13. Settembrini and Naphta
14. Borodino
15. 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
16. His plays are generally considered untranslatable.
Racine
'Crime and Punishment'
(Vladimir) Propp
(Kenneth) Burke
17. Group of literary theorists and critics working from a phenomenological perspective.
Geneva School
Baudelaire
'The Playboy of the Western World' (Synge)
'The Charterhouse of Parma' (Stendhal)
18. A retelling of the story of Phaedra - Theseus - and Hippolyte.
19. Set partially in the Berghof sanatorium.
20. It tells the story of an Italian-American widow in Louisiana who has allowed herself to withdraw from the world after her husband'S death - and expects her daughter to do the same.
21. Claire and Solange
22. 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
23. 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
24. The story documents the troubles of Tayo - a Native American World War II veteran who strives to overcome PTSD and end the drought that is devastating his Laguna Pueblo people.
25. Reification and class consciousness - Wrote 'The Theory of the Novel' and 'The Historical Novel'
'House Made of Dawn' (Momaday)
'War and Peace'
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
'Who'S Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' (Albee)
26. 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
Albee
(Lyubov) Ranevskaya
(Michel) Foucault
(Barbara) Pym
27. Set in Amsterdam - it consists of a series of second-person dramatic monologues of a penitent judge.
28. Heterotopia and parrhesia - 'Regimes of truth' and 'Surveillance' - 'gaze' and 'archive'
29. 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 Charterhouse of Parma' (Stendhal)
Emma Bovary (Roualt)
'A Handful of Dust' (Waugh)
Ionesco
30. Ends: 'Yes - she thought - laying down her brush in extreme fatigue - I have had my vision.'
31. 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
'Pere Goriot' (Goriot'S daughters)
'Athalie' (Racine)
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
32. Native American novelist and poet.
Dr. Rieux
'It Can'T Happen Here' (Lewis)
(Hélène) Cixous
Louise Erdrich
33. '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.
34. 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.'
35. Metafictional American writer who wrote 'Lost in the Funhouse' and 'Chimera'
(John) Barth
Wimsatt and Beardsley
Meursault
'Who'S Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' (Albee)
36. Valentin Voloshinov and Terry Eagleton -
(J. Hillis) Miller
Charles
Marxist (criticism)
(Georges) Poulet
37. Became the subject of a heated 'querelle' over the neoclassical unities. The play focuses on Don Rodrigue and Chimène. Rodrigue'S father - Don Diègue - is the old upstart general of medieval Spain and past his prime - whereas Chimène'S father is the
38. Wrote 'Structure - Sign - and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences' and 'Speech and Phenomena'
'Juno and the Paycock' (O'Casey)
Derrida
'Three Lives' (Stein)
(Jean-Baptiste) Clamence
39. Hector'S wife
'Eugenie Grandet' (Balzac)
'Three Lives' (Stein)
Andromache
'The Sorrows of Young Werther' (Goethe)
40. Parnell and Cranly
41. Amanda and Laura Wingfield - Jim O'Connor
42. 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.
43. Set in the working class tenements of Dublin in the early 1920s - during the Irish Civil War period - it concerns the Boyle family.
44. 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
45. Wrote 'Charles Dickens: The World of His Novels' and 'The Critic as Host'
(J. Hillis) Miller
(Jean-Baptiste) Clamence
(Georges) Poulet
(Elaine) Showalter
46. 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
(Lyubov) Ranevskaya
Maggie Tulliver
Julien Sorel
(Countess) Natasha Rostov ('War and Peace')
47. Dolores Haze
48. The husband of Emma Bovary.
'Death in Venice' (Mann)
'Ceremony' (Silko)
'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' (Williams)
Charles
49. The protagonist of 'The Mill on the Floss.' Her brother is Tom.
'Nausea' (Sartre)
Racine
Cheever
Maggie Tulliver
50. Chronicles the tragedy of Edward Ashburnham and his own seemingly perfect marriage and that of two American friends. The novel employs a series of flashbacks in non-chronological order - as well as an unreliable narrator.