English Literature Quiz 37
1 / 50
Who, among the following, is not the second generation of British Romantics ?
2 / 50
Ted Hughes was married to which American poetess ?
3 / 50
?Heaven lies about us in our infancy?. This line occurs in the poem ?
4 / 50
From which lay is the quote ?she had no equal in the kingdom? taken ?
5 / 50
Which of the following would a Romantic Poet be most likely to use ?
6 / 50
In Vita Nuova, how does Dante represent love ?
7 / 50
Who referred to poets as ?the unacknowledged legislators of the world? ?
8 / 50
According to Dr. Mazzotta, what does the phrase ?the little bark? mean ?
9 / 50
Which of the following writers was among the founders of the Imagist movement ?
10 / 50
Sounds articulated with the tip of the tongue or the blade of the tongue against the teeth ridge are called _________?
11 / 50
With which of these writers is the ?spontaneous overflow of emotion? associated ?
12 / 50
As originally envisioned by John Milton, ?Paradise Lost? would consist of how many books ?
13 / 50
Which author(s) are associated with Modernism ?
14 / 50
In Ulysses, Joyce retells which ancient story ?
15 / 50
Which of the following best characterizes Wordsworth?s attitude towards the French Revolution ?
16 / 50
In Shakespeare?s plays, when is rhyme often used ?
17 / 50
Which of the following is Golding?s first novel ?
18 / 50
According to Professor Hammer, Wallace Stevens?s understanding of the imagination has most in common with which of the following literary traditions ?
19 / 50
The Pre-Raphaelites are best known for which of the following ?
20 / 50
Which of the following serves as the best definition of the literary critical practice of formalism ?
21 / 50
Which work did Edmund Spenser author ?
22 / 50
Which queen of England attended a number of William Shakespeare?s play ?
23 / 50
Fill in the blank. Martin Luther nailed his _____________ to a church door in Wittenberg, accusing the Roman Catholic Church of heresy upon heresy?
24 / 50
What religion had the most political and social power in Shakespeare?s time ?
25 / 50
According to ?Hare?s Adventure?, how does he get his ?burnt buttocks? ?
26 / 50
According to Laura Smith, that which ?affect[s] the human mind with a sense of overwhelming grandeur or irresistible power; calculated to inspire awe, deep reverence, or loft emotion, by reason of its beauty, vastness, or grandeur? is known as the______________?
27 / 50
Which of the following critics preferred Shakespeare?s Comedies to his Tragedies ?
28 / 50
When was John Keats born?
29 / 50
Which character best represents the concept of terror versus that of horror in Lewis?s ?The Monk? ?
30 / 50
In what way does Thornfield Hall differ from the Castle of Otranto, Udolpho, and the Convent of St. Clare ?
31 / 50
Who propounds ?the touchstone method?_______________?
32 / 50
from which language the name ?chaucer? has been driven ?
33 / 50
How many sonnets are attributed to Shakespeare ?
34 / 50
What is the name of the eccentric scientist in the novel Frankenstein ?
35 / 50
Fill in the blank. John Foxe was deeply disgusted by the _______________, and could not believe that any honest Christian could accept its doctrinal basis ?
36 / 50
Novel Animal Farm was written by___________?
37 / 50
How is the lai similar to a medieval romance ?
38 / 50
The age tended to favour the taste and search for truth in art______________?
39 / 50
?The end of writing is to instruct, the end of poetry is to instruct by pleasing.? Whose view is this ?
40 / 50
Which of the following statements best describes the ?Great Chain of Being? ?
41 / 50
What is dialogism ?
42 / 50
Which chilling novel of surveillance and entrapment had the alternative title Things as They Are ?
43 / 50
What is Mrs. Shelby?s first name ?
44 / 50
The language variety which has certain features which are typical of certain disciplines, topics, fields, occupations and social roles played by the speaker, is called________________ ?
45 / 50
Which of the following are Thomas Hardy books ?
46 / 50
One purpose of LITERARY CRITICISM is described below: ?The historical approach, for instance, might be helpful in addressing a problem in Thomas Otway?s play Venice Preserv?d. Why are the conspirators, despite the horrible, bloody details of their obviously brutish plan, portrayed in a sympathetic light? If we look at the author and his time, we see that he was a Tory whose play was performed in the wake of the Popish Plot and the Exclusion Bill Crisis, and that there are obvious similarities between the Conspiracy in the play and the Popish Plot in history. The Tories would never approve of the bloody Popish Plot, but they nonetheless sympathized with the plotters for the way they were abused by the Tory enemy, the Whigs. Thus it makes sense for Otway to condemn the conspiracy itself in Vencie Preserv?d without condemning the conspirators themselves.? What purpose does this prescribe to ?
47 / 50
Chaucer buried in a corner of Westminster, which came to know as______________?
48 / 50
Who wrote the poem ?Defence of Lucknow? ?
49 / 50
When did the Roman Empire formally legalize Christianity ?
50 / 50
A work of criticism that considers how English imperialism affected native Indian authors would be an example of_______________?
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