SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Literature: World Literature
Start Test
Study First
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. Epistolary novel (letters sent to Wilhelm) set in the fictional village of Wahlheim
2. The Mickey Mouse Club and the MagiPeel Peeler
3. Ends: 'Yes - she thought - laying down her brush in extreme fatigue - I have had my vision.'
4. 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.
'Middlemarch'
(J. Hillis) Miller
'Herzog' (Bellow)
Alceste
5. Involves a blind daughter and hunting rabbits in a loft.
6. 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
7. The story focuses on a doctor'S wife who has adulterous affairs and lives beyond her means in order to escape the banalities and emptiness of provincial life.
8. The protagonist of 'The Stranger'
'Ceremony' (Silko)
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
Meursault
9. Orgon and Elmire - Damis - Mariane - and Dorine
10. The narrator of 'The Plague -' although he is not revealed to be so until the conclusion.
'Mother Courage and Her Children' (Brecht)
Dr. Rieux
'Barn Burning' (Faulkner)
(Elaine) Showalter
11. 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
12. 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.
13. Raskolinikov'S sister - she is decisive and brave - ending her engagement with Luzhin when he insults her family and fending off Svidrigailov with gunfire.
(Paul) de Man
'Lord Jim' (Conrad)
Wimsatt and Beardsley
Dunya
14. Wrote 'The Roads to Freedom -' a WWII triology about Mathieu - a socialist teacher of philosophy and somewhat of a stand-in for the author.
Sartre
Junto
'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' (Williams)
Alexei (Karenin)
15. Wrote 'The Blacks' and 'The Maids'
Joyce ('Portrait of an Artist')
'Andromaque' (Racine)
Humbert Humbert
Jean Genet
16. The daughter of King Minos and wife of Theseus.
Auerbach
Phaedra
'The Seagull' (Chekhov)
Frye
17. The independent-minded and socially awkward co-protagonist of 'Anna Karenina.' Whereas Anna'S pursuit of love ends in tragedy - his long courtship of Kitty Shcherbatskaya ultimately ends in a happy marriage.
Foucault'S ideas
Konstantin Levin
(Alexei) Vronsky
'The Iron Heel'
18. Ends: 'Yes - they will trample me underfoot - the numbers marching one two three - four hundred million five hundred six - reducing me to specks of voiceless dust - just as - in all good time - they will trample my son who is not my son - and his son
19. James and Edward Tyrone
20. The narrator describes him as the 'hero' of novel and claims that the book is his 'biography.' A young - handsome man of about twenty - he is remarkable for his extraordinarily mature religious faith - his selflessness - and his innate love of humank
21. Best known for his analysis of interpretive communities — an offshoot of reader-response criticism.
'It Can'T Happen Here' (Lewis)
'Midnight'S Children' (Rushdie)
'Lolita' (her real name)
(Stanley) Fish
22. 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
23. The novels chronicle the life of Christopher Tietjens - 'The last Tory -' a brilliant government statistician from a wealthy land-owning family who is serving in the British Army during World War I.
24. 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
25. Subaltern - strategic essentialism
(Gayatri) Spivak
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
'The Black Sheep' (Balzac)
'Hedda Gabler' (her husband)
26. 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.
'Tartuffe' (Moliere)
Sonya (Marmeladov)
'The Wild Duck' (Ibsen)
'The Plough and the Stars' (O'Casey)
27. 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
28. 'The death of the author' and 'writing degree zero' - Distinguished between the author and scriptor and Doxa and Para-doxa - 'Readerly' and 'writerly' texts - Wrote 'S/Z' and 'Mythologies'
(Elaine) Showalter
'Lost Illusions' (Balzac)
(Roland) Barthes
Hermione
29. 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
'The Plague' (Camus)
'The Red and the Black' (Stendhal)
'The Cherry Orchard' (Chekhov)
30. Begins: 'If I am out of my mind - it'S all right with me.'
31. The protagonist - Olga - has always been in love with someone—starting with her father as a young child—and that she inspires mutual affection from most of the people she meets. She marries Kukin and - after his death - Vasily.
32. The novel depicts the inward journey of Mrs. Curren - an old classics professor. She lives in the Cape Town of the Apartheid era - where she is slowly dying of cancer. She has been philosophically opposed to the Apartheid regime her entire life - but
33. An aristocratic woman. The protagonist of 'The Cherry Orchard.'
Camus
(Lyubov) Ranevskaya
(Jean) Moreas
Dunya
34. Wrote 'The Myth of Sisyphus' and 'The Rebel'
'Rabbit - Run' (Updike)
Camus
Junto
(Gyorgy) Lukacs
35. A gentleman'S debating club founded by Ben Franklin.
'Britannicus' (Racine)
Junto
'The Plague' (Camus)
Lyotard
36. Ends: 'But that is the beginning of a new story—the story of the gradual renewal of a man - the story of his gradual regeneration - of his passing from one world into another - of his initiation into a new unknown life. That might be the subject of a
37. Wrote 'The Sandbox -' a universal failure.
Camus
Albee
'The Hairy Ape' (O'Neil)
'Mother Courage and Her Children' (Brecht)
38. Set in Amsterdam - it consists of a series of second-person dramatic monologues of a penitent judge.
39. (A lawyer and a painter) Herr Huld and Titorelli
40. Emma Clery and Belvedere
41. Jorgan Tesman
42. 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
43. Wrote 'Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature' and 'Contingency - Irony - and Solidarity' - ironism - final vocabulary - and postphilosophy
(Richard) Rorty
(Vladimir) Propp
'The Crying of Lot 49'
'Ceremony' (Silko)
44. John Oakhurst and Tom Simson. Tells the story of a town with serious financial and moral problems. In an effort to save what is left of the town and reestablish it as a virtuous place to be - a secret committee is created and it is decided whom ought
45. Achilles' son
'The Plague' (Camus)
Ivan ('The Brothers Karamazov')
Pyrrhus
'Mother Courage and Her Children' (Brecht)
46. Jack and Nora Clitheroe - The final acts take place on the Easter Rising of 1916.
47. His plays are generally considered untranslatable.
Bakhtin
Albee
'Miss Julie' (Strindberg)
Racine
48. 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
49. 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
Sonya (Marmeladov)
Camus
'The Five-Forty-Eight' (Cheever)
50. Concerns a woman - Oedipa Maas - possibly unearthing the centuries-old conflict between two mail distribution companies - Thurn und Taxis and the Trystero