July 2018
July 2018
1.
Which narrative poem by Lord Tennyson presents the story of a fisherman turned
Merchant sailor who, after a shipwreck, is marooned on a desert island ?
1.”Crossing
the Bar”
2.”Tithonus”
3.”Enoch Arden”
4.”Maud”
Answer:
3
2.
In “Memorial Verses” Matthew Arnold pays tribute to three great poets. Who are
they ?
1.
Goethe, Shakespeare, Wordsworth
2.
Goethe, Shakespeare, Milton
3.
Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth
4. Goethe, Wordsworth, Byron
Answer:
4
3.
Who among the following English playwrights wrote screenplays on novels such as
Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time, John Fowles’s French Lieutenant’s
Woman, and Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale ?
1.
John Arden
2.
Edward Bond
3. Harold Pinter
4.
David Hare
Answer:
3
4.
The years in English literary history between 1649 and 1660 are known as
1.
the Neo-Classical period
2. the Commonwealth period
3.
the Stuart period
4.
the Jacobean period
Answer:
2
5.
In R.K. Narayan’s Swami and Friends, which game oô€ƒ ers Swami the best kind of emotional release from the strains and
pressures of disagreeable circumstances ?
1. Cricket
2.
Football
3.
Tennis
4.
Hockey
Answer:
1
6.
William Blake expressed the importance of the particular when he said that “To
Generalize is to be ____________. To Particularize is the alone Distinction of
Merit.” Fill in the blank.
1. An Idiot
2.
A Poet
3.
A Dreamer
4.
A Skunk
Answer:
1
7.
Which of the following was not a dialect of Old English ?
1. Irish
2.
Northumbrian
3.
Mercian
4.
Kentish
Answer;
1
8.
Anthony Burgess’s last novel, published in 1993, is called A Dead Man in
Deptford. Who is the central character to whom the title refers ?
1.
Sir Walter Raleigh
2.
Sir Philip Sidney
3. Christopher Marlowe
4.
Earl of Southampton
Answer:
3
9.
Choose the chronological order:
1.
William Caxton prints the first English book – William Shakespeare’s First
Folio – John Milton’s Areopagitica – “Tottel’s Miscellany” (Songs and Sonnets).
2.
“Tottel’s Miscellany” (Songs and Sonnets) – William Shakespeare’s First Folio –
William Caxton prints the first English book – John Milton’s Areopagitica.
3. William Caxton prints the first English book –
“Tottel’s Miscellany” (Songs and Sonnets) – William Shakespeare’s First Folio –
John Milton’s Areopagitica.
4.
William Shakespeare’s First Folio – John Milton’s Areopagitica – William Caxton
prints the first English book – “Tottel’s Miscellany” (Songs and Sonnets).
Answer:
3
10.
What does the phrase ut pictura poesis from Horace’s Art of Poetry mean ?
1. “as in painting, so in poetry”.
2.
“poetry beggars pictorial description” .
3.
“as in poetry, so in painting” .
4.
“picture above all poetry” .
Answer:
1
11.
Who among the following is the author of Account of the Augustan Age in England
(1759) ?
1.
John Gay
2.
William Hazlitt
3. Oliver Goldsmith
4.
Samuel Johnson
Answer:
3
12.
In how many parts did Cervantes publish his novel, Don Quixote ?
1.
Three
2.
Five
3. Two
4.
Twelve
Answer:
3
13.
Lytton Strachey’s Eminent Victorians carries biographical sketches of writers and
public
figures. Identify the list below that correctly mentions those Eminent
Victorians.
1.Cardinal Manning, Florence Nightingale, Thomas
Arnold and General Gordon.
2.A.E.W.
Mason, Sir Arthur Quiller Couch, Matthew Arnold, Robert Bridges.
3.E.F.
Benson, Cardinal Manning, Lord Tennyson, Beatrice Webb.
4.George
Harding, General Gordon, Robert Browning, Mrs Humphrey Ward.
Answer:
1
14.
One of the following statements about the eponymous saint of Dryden’s “Song for
St. Cecilia’s Day” is incorrect. Identify that Statement.
1.St.
Cecilia’s was a Roman Lady, an early Christian martyr.
2.St. Cecilia’s was an Armenian devotee of the
Christian Faith.
3.St.
Cecilia’s festival is celebrated on 22 November in England.
4.St.
Cecilia’s was a patroness of music who was fabled to have invented the organ.
Answer:
2
15.
Which of the statements on Michael Robert’s Faber Book of Modern Verse (1936)
is not true ?
1.His
anthology canonized modern poetry and poets for quite some decades.
2.The Collection begins with the poems of Robert
Bridges.
3.Roberts
omitted the Georgian poets in his anthology.
4.Yeats,
Eliot and Pound find a place in the Faber Book of 1936.
Answer:
2
16.
Who among the following proposed that the First Gulf War had never taken
place,
it was simply a hyperreal, media-generated spectacle?
1.Richard
Rorty
2.Jean-Francois
Lyotard
3.Jean Baudrillard
4.Umberto
Eco
Answer:
3
17.
Sir Thomas Browne’s Urn Burial was prompted by
1. The Discovery of ancient buial-urns near Norwich.
2.
The Contemporary researches on burial rites in Norway.
3.
The Death of St. Francis of Assissi and his burial.
4.
The Publication of the English Book of Common Prayer.
Answer:
1
18.
Identify from the among the following list those that cannot be called War
Fiction.
A. A Modern Instance
B.
Catch – 22
C. The Age of Innocence
D.
The Naked and the Dead.
1.
(a) and (b)
2.
(b) and (c)
3. (a) and (c)
4.
(b) and (d)
Answer:
3
19.
Who among the following writers was not the one Identified with The Movement of
the 1950’s England ?
1. Roy Fuller
2.
Kingsley Amis
3.
Philip Larkin
4.
Donald Davie
Answer:
1
20.
Which of the following novels does not belong to Nuruddin’s Farah’s Blood In
the Sun Trilogy ?
1.
Maps
2. Knots
3.
Gifts
4.
Secrets
Answer:
2
21.
In the following series, which one has all the poets correctly matched in the
poems ?
1.
Ezekiel, “Poet, Lover, Birdwatcher” ; Ramanujan, ” Small-Scale Reflections on a
Great house” ; Dutt, “Sunset at Puri” ; Mahapatra, “Our Casurina Tree” .
2.
Ezekiel, “Sunset at Puri” ; Ramanujan, “Small-Scale Reflections on a Great
house” ; Dutt, “Our Casurina Tree” ; Mahapatra, “Poet, Lover, Birdwatcher” .
3.
Ezekiel, “Poet, Lover, Birdwatcher” ; Ramanujan, “Sunset at Puri” ; Dutt, “Our
Casurina Tree” ; Mahapatra, “Small-Scale Reflections
on a Great house” .
4. Ezekiel, “Poet, Lover, Birdwatcher” ; Ramanujan,
“Small-Scale Reflectionson a Great house” ; Dutt, “Our Casurina Tree” ; ;
Mahapatra, “Sunset at Puri” .
Answer:
4
22.
From among the following, identify the incorrect observation regarding
Ferdinand de Saussure’s seminal distinction between language and parole.
1. Parole is the particular language system,the
elements, the elements of which we learn as children, and which is codified in our grammars and dictionaries, whereas langue is
the language-occasion (what A says to B).
2.
A language consists in the interrelationship between Langue and Parole.
3.
Saussure made this crucial distinction in a study called A Course in General
Linguistics (1916).
4.
Langue is the particular language-system, the elements of which we learn as
children,
and
which is codified in our grammars and
dictionaries, whereas Parole is the language occasion
(what
A says to B).
Answer:
1
23.
John Heywood wrote a farcical Interlude called The Four P’s.
1.
a Palmer, a Pedlar, a Pothecary, a Packer
2.
a Printer, a Pedlar, a Pothecary, a Palmer
3.
a Pedlar, a Parson, a Palmer, a Pothecary
4. a Palmer, a Pardoner, a Pothecary, a Pedlar
Answer:
4
24.
In the mechanical drill method of second language acquisition :
(a)
The learner has the freedom to from many responses.
(b) The learner’s response is totally controlled.
(c) Comprehension of the item by the learner is not
required.
(d)
Comprehension of the item by the learner is obligatory.
The
right combination according to the Code is:
1.
(a) and (d)
2.
(a) and (c)
3. (b) and (c)
4.
(b) and (d)
Answer:
3
25.
Thou will not wake
Till
i thy fate shall overtake;
Till
age, or grief, or sickness must
Marry
my body to that dust
It
so much loves; and fill the room
My
heart keeps empty in the Tomb.
Stay
for me there; I will not fail
To
meet thee in that hollow Vale.
And
think not much of my delay;
I
am already on the way.
Which
of the following readings do you find appropriate to the spirit of the lines
above ?
1.
In that inter space between the lines, the ending of one and the beginning of
another, there is a silent internal language, the poem’s
language-within-language, tacitly signaled through the deployment of rhymed
space.
2. Ageing and dying are of course helplessly passive ;
but here love make them as though they were now also willing things in the
husband eager to join his dead wife. Through simple intimate tones of the
shared earthly life – stay for me, wait for me, I will not fail- he not only
imagines her but imagines her thinking for him.
3.
The lyric voice here can feel the poem speaking back to him – in the cold
lineal stare of ‘there was nothing in my belief’ – even as his dead wife did
not. It is as though the poem itself then demands his response, in order to be
able to move from one line to another. To attempt that movements in keeping the
poem’s space alive, the lyric voice asserts, “I will not fail/to meet there in
that hallow Vate.”
4.
My whole nature was so penetrated with grief and humiliation of such considerations,
That, even now, famous and caressed and happy as I am, I often forget to my
dream that I have a dear wife who died, leaving me alone in this world. Even
that I am a man, and now I wander desolately back to that time of our lives
when my wife and I shared moments of bliss.
Answer:
2
26.
Match the characters with the novels:
(a)
Arthur Seaton (i) Top Girls
(b)
Marlene (ii) The Golden Notebook
(c)
Anna Wulf (iii)
The Swimming Pool Library
(d)
Beckwith (iv) Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
Code:
(a)
(b) (c) (d)
1.
(ii) (iii) (i) (iv)
2. (iv) (i) (ii) (iii)
3.
(iii) (iv) (ii) (i)
4.
(ii) (iv) (iii) (i)
Answer:
2
27.
The very last passage of a novel is given below. Identify the novel.
“Welcome,
O life, I go to encounter for the Millionth time the reality of experience and
to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race. April
27. Old father, Old artificer, stand me now and ever in good stead.”
1.
To the light house
2. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
3.
Maurice
4.
Almayer’s Folly
Answer:
2
28.
Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis is about a utopian state called
1.
Asgard
2.
Avalon
3. Bensalem
4.
Baltia
Answer:
3
29.
The 1950’s saw the rise of backlash against modernism and against New Romanticism
that became known as The Movement. Which of the following little magazines came
to be associated with The Movement ?
(a) Departure
(b)
New Verse
(c)
London Mercury
(d) New Poems
The
right combination according to the code is:
1.
(a) and (b)
2.
(c) and (d)
3. (a) and (d)
4.
(b) and (d)
Answer:
3
30.
The error of interpreting a literary work by referring to evidence outside of
itself, such as the design and purpose of the author is called
1.
Affective fallacy
2. Intentional fallacy
3.
Authorial fallacy
4.
Synecdochic fallacy
Answer:
2
31.
A.R. Ammons parodies a famous poemin his “Swoggled”
I’d
rather
be
suckled
by
an
outworn
pagan
than
get
my horn
wreathed
in
an
old
Triton.
Which
poet, which poem ?
1.
John Keats, “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer”
2.
John Milton, “On His Blindness”
3. William Wordsworth, “The World is Too Much with Us”
4.
Elizabeth B. Browning, “How do I Love Thee…?”
Answer:
3
32.
Fanny Burney’s Evelina carries the subtitle:
1.
or a Naive Lady’s Entrance into the World.
2. or a Young Lady’s Entrance into the World.
3.
or a Young Lady’s Exit into the World.
4.
or a Bold Lady’s Entrance into the Hall.
Answer;
2
33.
What does Philip Sidney call poet-haters in his Defence of Poesie ?
1.
Misogynists
2.
Misanthropes
3.
Misnomers
4. Mysomousoi
Answer:
4
34.
Who, among the following raises the following painful question of longing and belonging
?
“Where
shall I turn, divided to the vein ?
i
who have cursed
The
drunken officer of British rule, how choose Between
this Africa and the English tongue I love?”
1. Derek Walcott
2.
Louise Bennett
3.
Kamau Brathwaite
4.
Wole Soyinka
Answer:
1
35.
In the 1940’s, a critic and a philosopher produced two influential and
controversial
papers called “The Intentional Fallacy” and “The Affective Fallacy”.
Identify
Them
(a)
Cleanth Brooks
(b) Monroe C. Beardsley
(c) William K. Wimsalt Jr.
(d)
R.P. Blackmur
The
right combination according to the code is:
1.
(a) and (b)
2.
(b) and (d)
3. (b) and (c)
4.
(c) and (d)
Answer:
3
36.
Philip Larkin’s “Sad Steps” notices “The way the moon dashes through clouds that
blow Loosely as cannon-smoke to stand apart…”
The
poem alludes to :
1.
Coleridge’s “Dejection : An Ode”
2.
The moonlit scenes in A Midsummer Night’s Dream
3. Philip Sidney’s Astrophel and Stella
4.
T.S. Eliot’s ‘Morning at the Window”
Answer:
3
37.
Match the following opening lines with their respective titles:
(a)
“I leant upon a coppice gate” (i)
“Thirteen Blackbirds”
(b)
“A Sudden blow: the great wings (ii) “Sympathy” beating still….”
(c)
“Among twenty snowy mountains” (iii)
“The Darkling Thrusts”
(d)
“I know what the caged bird feels, (iv) “Leds and the Swan” alas…”
Code:
(a)
(b) (c) (d)
1.
(iv) (iii) (ii) (i)
2. (iii) (iv) (i) (ii)
3.
(ii) (i) (iii) (iv)
4.
(i) (ii) (iv) (iii)
Answer:
2
38.
Identify the titles that were published in the 1920’s
(a)
Look, Stranger!
(b) The Tower
(c) The Waste Land
(d)
The Road to Wigan Pier
Code:
1.
(a) and (c)
2. (b) and (c)
3.
(b) and (d)
4.
(c) and (d)
Answer:
2
39.
This novel is dedicated. “To the railroad of bones” and has as its epigraph the
line,
“I
am the woman they give dead women’s clothes to” from Christine Gelineau’s “Inheritance”
Identify
the novel
1.
African Psycho by Alain Mabanckou
2.
The Chibok Girls by Helon Habila
3.
The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
4. The Book of Night Women by Marlon James
Answer:
4
40.
An English poet couldn`t help the excitement that an historical event caused in
his life-time:
Bliss
was it in that dawn to be alive,
But
to be young was very heaven
Which
poet? What ‘dawn’?
1.
W.H Auden; the Spanish Civil War
2.
Lord Tennyson; the Jubilee of Queen Victoria`s reign
3. William Wordsworth; the French Revolution
4.
William Blake; the Industrial Revolution
Answer:
3
41.
Which novel by John Banville tells the story of a group of travellers who
arrive on a small island and stumble upon the house of Prof. Kreutznaer whose
relationship to a painting entitled The Golden World by a fictional Dutch
artist named Vaublin plays a central role?
1. Ghosts
2.
The Sea
3.
The Ark
4.
Eclipse
Answer:
1
42.
Identify the two plays usually paired for their critique of the politics of
language and acts of police interrogation
1.
Earthly Powers, The Wanting Seed
2.
Chicken Soup with Barley, Roots
3.
Left-handed Liberty, The Hero Rises
4. One for the Road, Mountain Language
Answer:
4
43.
Semiotics originated mainly in the works of two theorists. They are:
a. Charles Sanders Peirce
b.
Mikhail Bakhtin
c. Ferdinand de Saussure
d.
Valentin Voloshinov
The
right combination according to the code is ______________ .
1.
(a) and (b)
2.
(b) and (c)
3. (a) and (c)
4.
(c) and (d)
Answer:
3
44.
Robert Burton`s Anatomy of Melancholy was published in 1621 and expanded
and
altered in _________________ subsequent editions
1.
two
2.
four
3.
six
4. five
Answer:
4
45.
Which of the following magazines self consciously created an identity for Vorticists,
a group of painters, sculptors and writers?
1. Blast
2.
The Egoist
3.
The Criterion
4.
New Age
Answer:
1
46.
“In Every cry of every Man,
In
every Infant’s cry of fear
In
every voice, in every ban….”
The
figure of speech characterized by repetition of words or group of words at the
beginning
of consecutive sentence is called
1.
Apostrophe
2. Anaphora
3.
Incremental Repetition
4.
Alliteration
Answer:
2
47.
At whose behest does the Redcrosse Knight undertake his quest in The Faerie
Queene
?
1.
Gloriana’s
2. Una’s
3.
Duessa’s
4.
Prosperine’s
Answer:
2
48.
In which city did John Ruskin see a paradigm for Victorian Britain ?
1.
Vienna
2. Venice
3.
Rome
4.
Paris
Answer:
2
49.
Which novel of Kazuo Ishiguro is narrated by a Japanese widow living in England
and
draws on the destruction and rehabilitation of Nagasaki ?
1.
An Artist of the Floating World
2.
The Unconsoled
3.
A Pale View of Hills
4.
When We Were Orphans
Answer:
3
50.
Which novels opens thus:
“Whether
I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be
held
by
anyone else, these pages must show.”
1.
Tristram Shandy
2.
Lady Audley’s Secret
3. David Copperfield
4.
Fitz-Boodle’s Confessions
Answer:
3
51.
Traces of the Morality plays are discernible in a play like Dr. Faustus, traces
such as
1.
Vernacular songs adapting secular themes
2. Its Soliloquizing Protagonist, Good and Bad Angels
and its final moral.
3.
Its Refrains from the Corpus Christi Carol, the complaint of Christ, the lover
of mankind.
4.
Its Rhythmical prose, and the presence of a larger narrative rhythm in the
Morality plays.
Answer:
2
52.
The branch of philosophy that asks the question, “How do we know what we know
is?”
1.
Ontology
2. Epistemology
3.
Eschatology
4.
Phenomenology
Answer:
2
53.
The eighteenth century practice in “England of book selling was midway between direct
patronage and impersonal sales. A patron paid half the cost of a book before publication
and half on delivery. The author of the book received these payments directly.
The patron’s name appeared in the preface for the book published in this manner.
This
practice was known as
1. Subscription
2.
Contribution
3.
Pre-publication
4.
Remaindering
Answer:
1
54.
Oxford India has published a volume of Premchand translations in English, The Oxford
India Premchand. Who among the following is not one of the translators?
1.
David Rubin
2.
Alok Rai
3. Gillian Wright
4.
Christopher King
Answer:
3
55.
Which of the two novels of Jane Austen have the spa town of Bath as a primary location?
(a)
Emma
(b)
Pride and Prejudice
(c) Northanger Abbey
(d) Persuasion
The
right combination according to the Code is:
1.
(a) and (d)
2.
(b) and (c)
3. (c) and (d)
4.
(a) and (b)
Answer:
3
56.
In the communicative approach to ELT, the development of language learning or teaching
involves a shift;
(a) from form-based to a meaning-based approach
(b)
from an electic approach to a rigid method
(c) from teacher-centered to learner-centered classes
(d)
from broad-based competence to specific needs
The
right combination according to the Code is:
1.
(b) and (d)
2.
(a) and (d)
3.
(b) and (c)
4. (a) and (c)
Answer:
4
57.
The four Moral Essays of Alexander Pope are addressed to carefully selected
figures.
Identify
1.
Timons, Newton, Martha Blount, Wellington
2.
Lord Cobham, Robert Walpole, Houghton Hall, Chandos
3. Martha Blount, Lord Cobham, Bathurst, Burlington
4.
William III, John Haydn, Joseph Addison, John Dennis
Answer:
3
58.
Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage and Her Children presents the war-torn Europe as
its protagonist as she follows troops with her canteenwagon. What is the real
name of Mother Courage ?
1.
Paula Danckert
2. Anna Fierling
3.
Jane Vanstone
4.
Jani Lauzon
Answer:
2
59.
From among the following, identify the journal that publishes articles on
English language teaching and learning.
1.
University of Toronto Quarterly
2.
Agenda
3. TESOL Quarterly
4.
English Language Notes
Answer:
3
60.
Arrange the following Elegies in English in Chronological order:
1.
“Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard” – “Adonais” – “Thyrsis” – “In Memoriam”
2. “Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard” – “Adonais”
– “In Memoriam” – “Thyrsis”
3.
“Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard” – “In Memoriam” – “Adonais” – “Thyrsis”
4.
“Adonais” – “Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard” – “In Memoriam” – “Thyrsis”
Answer:
2
61.
Who is the only one of Milton’s contemporaries to be mentioned by name in
Paradise
Lost ?
1.
Francis Bacon
2.
Johannes Vermeer
3. Galileo
4.
King Charles
Answer:
3
62.
K.S. Maniam is a major writer of Indian origin, writing in English, born and
living in Malaysia.
Identify
two of his novels from the following list.
(a)
The Rice Mother
(b) The Return
(c)
Touching Earth
(d) Between Lives
The
right combination according to the Code is:
1.
(a) and (d)
2.
(b) and (c)
3.
(c) and (d)
4. (b) and (d)
Answer:
4
63.
What did Thomas Perey collect in his Reliques ?
1.
Medieval Folklore and lyrics of the Midlands
2. Old songs, ballads, and romances in English and
Scots
3.
Highland lore, mostly oral wisdom of the Scots
4.
Romantic idylls. sonnets and odes
Answer:
2
64.
Nirad Chaudhuri’s Autobiography of an Unknown Indian concludes with an essay
on
the course of Indian history. But in the penultimate chapter Chaudhuri
concludes
the
account of events in his life. How does this narrative end?
1.
Chaudhuri ties the knot with his childhood sweetheart and moves from Calcutta
to Delhi.
2. Chaudhuri obtains a job in the military accounts
department and gives it up because he finds it soul-destroying.
3.
Chaudhuri joins the editorial team of a Calcutta newspaper and is upset over
the drudgery of a reporter’s life.
4.
Chaudhuri rushes to his ancestral village Bangram on receiving the news of the
death of his uncle and recalls his past life.
Answer:
2
65.
In John Gower’s Confessio Amantis, Amans, the lover makes his confession to the
priest named
1.
Verito
2. Genius
3.
Amor
4.
Phoebe
Answer:
2
66.
In Eugene Ionesco’s Chairs, the absurdity is not much in the banal words that
aren uttered
1.
in the large scale use of frightening stage props and lighting effects.
2.
in the absurdist interpretation of them by character after character.
3. in the fact that they are spoken to an ever-growing
number of empty chairs.
4.
in the fact that they are spoken time and again by members of the audience.
Answer:
3
67.
A half-sentence in Purchas his Pilgrimage triggered off “Kubla Khan”. Whose work was Purchas hid Pilgrimage?
1.
Robert Herrick, the poet’s
2.
John Hakluyt’s, the collector of traveler’s tales
3. Samuel Purchas, the London Parson’s
4.
Edward Purchas, the globe-trotter’s
Answer:
3
68.
Based on the life of a thirteenth-century troubadour, from among the following identify
the work, that marked a catastrophic failure in Robert Browning’s poetic
career,
earning him a reputation for impenetrable difficulty?
1.
Paracelsus
2. Sordello
3.
The Ring and The Book
4.
Pauline
Answer:
2
69.
In Tristram Shandy, the Author’s preface
1.
is hawked to the highest bidder.
2.
appears in-between chapters 13 and 14 in Volume II.
3.
is printed in italics in all editions.
4.
appears in-between chapters 10 and 11 in Volume I.
Answer: appears
in volume 3
70.
Evelyn Waugh once complained that T.S. Eliot Poems, 1909-1925 was “marvelously
good, but very hard to understand,” The most pessimistic novel Waugh wrote was
called ____________ and he owed the title to ___________
1.
Black Mischief – “Sweeney among the Nightingales”
2.
Scoop – “Morning At the Window”
3.
Prancing Nigger – Ash Wednesday
4. A Handful of Dust – The Waste Land
Answer:
4
71.
During the years 1830 to 1850, the illusion of peace in Victorian England was broken
by such incidents as
1.
the Revolution in France and the Chartist Movement in England.
2.
the General Strike of 1835 and the Rail Tragedy of 1847.
3.
the visionary libertarianism of poets and the lawless embodiment of revolution.
4. the disaster of the Indian Mutiny and the incompetent
bungling of the Crimean War
Answer:
4
72.
Gulliver receives the following response when he boasts about his countrymen: “….the
most pernicious race of little odious vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the face of the earth.” Whose response?
1.
The King of Lilliput’s
2. The King of Brobdingnag’s
3.
The Governor of Glubbdubrib’s
4.
The first of the Houyhnhnm’s he meets.
Answer:
2
73.
In the Inferno Dante, as he travels through the various circles of the hell finds
Judas who is unable to speak. What is the reason behind this?
1.
His tongue is transformed into a coiled snake.
2.
His head is battered and so he cannot open his mouth.
3. Lucifer is chewing on his head.
4.
His tongue is pulled out and nailed on the tree of sin.
Answer:
3
74.
Assertion (A) : Our reality is linguistic, a language mediated reality.
Reason
(R) : Our perception and understanding of reality are largely constructed by
the
words and other signs we use.
In
the light of the statements above,
1. Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) is the correct
explanation of (A).
2.
Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) is not the correct explanation of (A).
3.
(A) is true but (R) is false.
4.
(A) is false but (R) is true.
Answer:
1
75.
In his book, In theory, Ajiaz Ahmed works out the relations between the three entities:
1. Classes, Nations, Literature’s.
2.
Regions, Nation, Languages.
3.
State, Religions. Gender.
4.
Literature, Print, Theory.
Answer:
1
76.
In 1660, a group of 12 people including Robert Boyle and Christopher Wren formed
what they called the Royal Society. In 1663, it became The Royal Society of London
for Improving Natural Knowledge. What was the Society’s motto?
1.
“In Him we trust”
2. “In the words of no one”
3.
“Lighted to lighten”
4.
“Love conquers all”
Answer:
2
77.
Of whom did W.B. Yeats say that “We were the last Romantics”?
1.
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
2.
The Imagiste poets
3. His Friends in the Irish Literary Revival.
4.
Himself and his lady love, Maud Gonne
Answer:
3
78.
Who wrote The Wandering Jew, a poem in four cantos and the short lyric, “The Wandering
Jew’s Solilquy”?
1.
S.T. Coleridge
2.
Lord Byron
3.
Thomas Gray
4. P.B. Shelley
Answer:
4
79.
Where, according to T.S. Eliot, are we likely to find “not only the best, but
the most individual parts of a poet’s work” ?
1.
in the poet’s juvenilia or rejected drafts.
2.
in the best anthologies and scrap-books.
3. in those parts where the dead poets assert their
immortality.
4.
in those parts where the living poets depart from their ancestors.
Answer:3
80.
Which of the following is true of The Canterbury Tales ?
1.
Chaucer, the pilgrim, narrates Sir Thopas Tale only.
2.
Chaucer, the pilgrim, narrates The Tale of Melibee only.
3. Chaucer, the pilgrim, narrates Sir Thopas Tale and
The Tale of Melibee .
4.
Chaucer, the pilgrim does attempt to narrate an unnamed tale but abruptly stops
due to the intervention of the other pilgrims.
Answer:
3
81.
During the reign of Norman Kings, it was fashionable to speak ___________ in upper
class circles in England.
1.
Norse
2.
Latin
3.
Danish
4. French
Answer:
4
82.
Who, among e following, collaborated with Purohit Swami in translating the Ten Principal
Upanishads into English ?
1.
Christopher Fry
2.
Aldous Huxley
3.
Lawrence Durrell
4. W.B. Yeats
Answer:
4
83.
What unique distinction does Ben Jonson’s “To Penshurst” have in the English literary
canon ?
1.
It is the only distinguished poem in English addressed to the Lords of
Penshurst.
2.
It celebrates Philip Sidney’s elevation to knighthood, Sidney being the
youngest scion of the family.
3. It is one of the first English poems celebrating a
specific place, a forerunner to Cooper’s Hill and Windsor Forest.
4.
It is the first poem in an elegiac series that late Elizabethan poets began on
the demise
of
the Lord of Penshurst.
Answer:
3
84.
It is well known that in many of his plays, To Stoppard has consciously drawn upon
earlier, often reputed works. Match the following Stoppard plays with earlier works
whose spirit seems to have informed them.
(a)
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (i)
Hamlet
(b)
Indian Ink (ii)
A Passage to India
(c)
Inspector Hound (iii)
The Mousetrap
(d)
Travesties (iv)
Importance of Being Earnest
Code:
(a)
(b) (c) (d)
1.
(iii) (ii) (i) (iv)
2.
(i) (ii) (iv) (iii)
3.
(iv) (iii) (i) (ii)
4. (ii) (i) (iv) (iii)
Answer:
4
85.
After discovering the truth about his heinous crimes committed in the past,
what does Oedipus request as his punishment?
1. Exile
2.
Castration
3.
Decapitation
4.
Blindness
Answer:
1
86.
How does Women in Love open?
1.
Rupert Birkin, Lawrence’s alter ego, is taking a walk in the English
Countryside.
2. The Brangwean sisters, Ursula and Gudrun, are
“working and talking”.
3.
The wedding party gathers at short lands, the Criches’s home.
4.
The last lesson is in progress, “peaceful and still” in Ursula’s classroom.
Answer:
2
87.
Samuel Johnson has the following to say about an English poet:
“These
images are marked by glittering accumulations of ungraceful ornaments : they strike,
rather than please. The images are magnified
by affectation : the language is labored
into harshness. The mind of the writer seems to work with unnatural violence -‘Double,
double, toil and trouble’. He has a kind of strutting dignity, and is tall by
walking on tiptoe. His art and his struggle are too visible, and there is too
little appearance of ease and nature.”
Identify
the poet.
1. Thomas Gray
2.
John Dryden
3.
John Milton
4.
Thomas Wyatt
Answer:
1
88.
“Take the smoking disclaimer issue” begins Vishal Bharadwaj. “Putting a disclaimer
every time somebody smokes on screen is not an answer. If M.F. Hussain had
painted a man with a cigar, would you have asked him to put the disclaimer, “Cigarette
smoking is injurious to health” on the painting”?
The
point Bharadwaj makes with his rhetorical question is the following:
1.
The smoking disclaimer is ineffectual
because M.F. Hussain’s painting wouldn’t have carried it.
2. The smoking disclaimer on objects perceived as
‘art’ is simply superfluous.
3.
The smoking disclaimer is ineffectual
because ‘art’ entertains but does not instruct.
4.
The smoking disclaimer on screen or on M.F. Hussain painting distracts us from
enjoying art.
Answer:
2
89.
According to ________ certain verbs actually :perform” an act when they are uttered.
1. Speech Act theorists such as Austin and Searle.
2.
Russian Formalists such as Shklovsky and Propp.
3.
Language theorists such as Sapir and Whorf.
4.
Cognitive Linguists suc
Answer:1
90.
Haunted castles, strange noises and an acceptance of the supernatural with all its
trappings mark _____________________
1.
meta fiction
2.
fantasy fiction
3.
epistolary fiction
4. gothic fiction
Answer:4
91.
…. sure it waits upon
Some
god o` the` island. Sitting on a bank
Weeping
again the King my father`s wrack
This
music crept by me upon the waters,
Allaying
both their fury and my passion
With
its sweet air. Thence I have followed it,
Or
it hath drawn me rather…
Which
of the following statements on this passage are true?
a.
These lines, spoken by Edgar in King Lear, are part of a long speech delivered
on the heath
b. These lines, spoken by Ferdinand in The Tempest,
describe Ariel`s music
c. The passage reappears in an altered and ironic
version in T.S Eliot`s Waste Land
d.
The passage reappears verbatim in W.H Auden`s Sea and the Mirror
The
correct answer according to the code is :
1.
(a) and (d)
2. (b) and (c)
3.
(c) and (d)
4.
(a) and (c)
Answer:2
92.
Arrange the following plays of Shakespeare according to their periods (early,
middle,
late…) of composition
1.
As You Like It, Love Labours Lost, Antony and Cleopatra, The Tempest, Midsummer
Night`s Dream
2.
Antony and Cleopatra, The Tempest, Midsummer Night`s Dream, Love `s Labours
Lost, As You Like It
3. Love `s Labours Lost, Midsummer Night`s Dream, As
You Like It, Antony and Cleopatra, The Tempest
4.
Midsummer Night`s Dream, Antony and Cleopatra, The Tempest, As You Like It,
Love `s Labours Lost
Answer:3
93.
Who among the following is not a reader-response critic?
1. Maud Bodkin
2.
Hans-Robert Jauss
3.
Stanley Fish
4.
Wolfgang Iser
Answer:1
94.
Leo Tolstoy`s Anna Karenina closing lines present…
1.
a sad reflection on the unfortunate suicide of Anna which should have been
averted
2.
the enlivening freshness of a rain which has been threatening to break out
3. Levin`s afirmation that whatever happens to him, life is not meaningless but unquestionably
meaningful
4.
Vronsky`s lament over the death of Anna which ends on a positive note, afirming the
human
tendency to pass over the tragic events with hope
Answer:3
95.
Which of the following novels begins with a Prologue under the Title ” The Storming
of Seringapatam” saying “I address these lines written in India- to my relatives
in England”?
1.
The Siege of Krishnapur by J.G farell
2. The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
3.
The Sign of Four by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
4.
The Jewel in the Crown by Paul Scott
Answer:2
96.
In “Gerontion” T.S ELiot says
”
_____________ has many cunning passages, contrived corridors / And issues,
deceives with whispering ambitions, / Guides us by vanities “ What is Eliot`s
subject?
1. History
2.
Politics
3.
State
4.
Religion
Answer:1
Read the following
poem and answer questions 97 to 100
The
Mountain
My
students look at me expectantly
I
explain to them that the life of art is a life
of
endless labor. Their expressions
hardly
change; they need to know
a
little more about endless labor.
So
I tell them the story of Sisyphus,
how
he was doomed to push
a
rock up a mountain knowing nothing
would
come of this effort
but
that he would repeat it
indefinitely.
I tell them
there
is joy in this, in the artist`s life,
that
one eludes
judgement,
and as I speak
I
am secretly pushing a rock myself,
slyly
pushing it up the steep
face
of a mountain. Why do I lie
to
these children? They aren`t listening,
they
aren`t deceived, their fingers
tapping
at the wooden desks-
So
I retract
the
myth; I tell them it occurs
in
hell, and that the artist lies
because
he is obsessed with attainment,
that
he perceived the summit
as
that place where he will live for ever,
a
place about to be
transformed
by his burden: with every breath,
I
am standing at the top of the mountain.
Both
my hands are free. And the rock has added
height
to the mountain
97.
Whose poetic voice is triggered right from the beginning?
1.
of student`s
2. of teacher`s
3.
of critics`
4.
of an observer`s
Answer:2
98.
The speaker brings up the story of Sisyphus specifically by way of glossing
____________
1.
art in life
2.
life in art
3. endless labor
4.
poetic expectation
Answer:3
99.
In its context, the words ‘the fingers/tapping at the wooden desks’ , best
represent
the students`
1.
lack of protest
2.
lack of interest
3.
show of disrespect
4. show of impatience
Answer:4
100.Why
does the speaker say that “the rock has added height to the mountain”?
1.
because the speaker is already on top of the mountain
2.
because both the hands of the speaker are now free
3.
because the mountain now seems largely incomprehensible
4. because she feels that the immensity of the problem
has grown
Answer:4
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