13 June, 2026

200 Most Important Literary Movements MCQs for GIC Lecturer Exam 2026 | Renaissance to Postcolonialism

 Practice 200 important MCQs on Literary Movements including Renaissance, Reformation, Metaphysical Poetry, Romanticism, Modernism, Postmodernism, and Postcolonial Literature. Specially designed for GIC Lecturer Exam 2026, UGC NET English, Assistant Professor, PGT, and other competitive literature examinations.



  1. The term "Elizabethan literature" refers specifically to English literature produced during which years?

A. 1500–1558
B. 1558–1603
C. 1603–1625
D. 1588–1616

Answer: B. 1558–1603

  1. Who is credited with introducing the sonnet into the English language?

A. William Shakespeare
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. Sir Thomas Wyatt
D. Edmund Spenser

Answer: C. Sir Thomas Wyatt

  1. Which Elizabethan playwright’s subject matter focused primarily on the moral drama of the Renaissance man?

A. John Lyly
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. Ben Jonson
D. Thomas Kyd

Answer: B. Christopher Marlowe

  1. Where did the Renaissance first begin?

A. London, England
B. Paris, France
C. Florence, Italy
D. Berlin, Germany

Answer: C. Florence, Italy

  1. The Renaissance outlook involved a shift from a theo-centric worldview to which worldview?

A. Eco-centric
B. Anthropocentric
C. Socio-centric
D. Techno-centric

Answer: B. Anthropocentric

  1. Which family provided patronage that helped Renaissance culture flourish in Florence?

A. Pazzi
B. Borgia
C. Medici
D. Visconti

Answer: C. Medici

  1. "Studia Humanitatis" primarily included which subjects?

A. Physics, Chemistry, Biology
B. Grammar, Poetry, Rhetoric, History, Moral Philosophy
C. Theology, Law, Medicine
D. Mathematics, Music, Astronomy

Answer: B. Grammar, Poetry, Rhetoric, History, Moral Philosophy

  1. Who wrote The Governour (1531)?

A. Sir Thomas More
B. Sir Thomas Elyot
C. Roger Ascham
D. Richard Mulcaster

Answer: B. Sir Thomas Elyot

  1. What was the first work by an Englishwoman to be published in the 16th century?

A. Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum
B. Translation of the Psalms
C. Margaret More Roper’s translation of Erasmus’s Precatio Dominica
D. Urania

Answer: C. Margaret More Roper’s translation

  1. Which critic used the term “metaphysical” as a criticism of certain poets?

A. Alexander Pope
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Samuel Johnson
D. John Milton

Answer: C. Samuel Johnson

  1. Which 20th-century poet praised the Metaphysical poets for their ability to absorb all kinds of experience?

A. W. B. Yeats
B. Ezra Pound
C. T. S. Eliot
D. Philip Larkin

Answer: C. T. S. Eliot

  1. Which is John Milton’s great epic poem?

A. The Faerie Queene
B. Paradise Lost
C. Samson Agonistes
D. Areopagitica

Answer: B. Paradise Lost

  1. What does Milton argue for in Areopagitica?

A. Divine right of kings
B. Abolition of marriage
C. Freedom of speech and unlicensed printing
D. Mandatory education for women

Answer: C. Freedom of speech and unlicensed printing

  1. Which University Wit is called the “true child of the Renaissance”?

A. John Lyly
B. Robert Greene
C. Christopher Marlowe
D. Thomas Nashe

Answer: C. Christopher Marlowe

  1. The word “Utopia” literally means:

A. Perfect place
B. Island of God
C. No place
D. Happy land

Answer: C. No place

  1. Who translated Castiglione’s Il Cortegiano into English?

A. Sir Thomas North
B. Sir Thomas Hoby
C. John Florio
D. Philemon Holland

Answer: B. Sir Thomas Hoby

  1. Mary Sidney is recognized as:

A. First female dramatist
B. First woman to pursue a clear literary vocation
C. First female printer
D. First female parliamentarian

Answer: B. First woman to pursue a clear literary vocation

  1. Why is Aemilia Lanyer’s Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum significant?

A. First picaresque novel
B. First systematic epideictic poetry about women
C. First revenge tragedy by a woman
D. First scientific treatise by a woman

Answer: B. First systematic epideictic poetry about women

  1. Who was the first Englishwoman to publish a long prose fiction and a complete sonnet sequence?

A. Mary Sidney
B. Elizabeth Cary
C. Mary Wroth
D. Anne Askew

Answer: C. Mary Wroth

  1. The prose style known for balanced clauses and antithesis is called:

A. Petrarchism
B. Euphuism
C. Spenserianism
D. Ciceronianism

Answer: B. Euphuism

  1. According to Bakhtin, the epic is oriented toward:

A. Present events
B. Future possibilities
C. Distant national past
D. Common domestic life

Answer: C. Distant national past

  1. Which poet’s Canzoniere became the model for Renaissance sonnet sequences?

A. Dante
B. Petrarch
C. Ariosto
D. Tasso

Answer: B. Petrarch

  1. Shakespeare’s sonnets are structured as:

A. Octave and sestet
B. Two quatrains and two tercets
C. Three quatrains and a couplet
D. Fourteen unrhymed lines

Answer: C. Three quatrains and a couplet

  1. Which invention is called a “communications revolution” by Elizabeth Eisenstein?

A. Fall of Constantinople
B. Printing press
C. Discovery of America
D. Spanish Armada defeat

Answer: B. Printing press

  1. What does “Sprezzatura” mean?

A. Decorum
B. Tropicity
C. Effortless grace
D. Humanitas

Answer: C. Effortless grace

  1. Who initiated the Reformation with the Ninety-Five Theses in 1517?

A. John Calvin
B. Martin Luther
C. Zwingli
D. William Tyndale

Answer: B. Martin Luther

  1. Which Act made the English monarch head of the Church of England?

A. Act of Uniformity
B. Act of Supremacy
C. Six Articles
D. Ten Articles

Answer: B. Act of Supremacy

  1. William Tyndale translated ecclesia as:

A. Church
B. Priest
C. Congregation
D. Religion

Answer: C. Congregation

  1. In Doctor Faustus, which Bible does Faustus consult?

A. Geneva Bible
B. Great Bible
C. St. Jerome’s Vulgate
D. Tyndale’s New Testament

Answer: C. St. Jerome’s Vulgate

  1. Which work by John Foxe records Protestant martyrdoms?

A. Book of Common Order
B. Image of Bothe Churches
C. Actes and Monuments
D. Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity

Answer: C. Actes and Monuments

  1. Who compiled the 1549 Book of Common Prayer?

A. Thomas Cranmer
B. Thomas Cromwell
C. Hugh Latimer
D. Matthew Parker

Answer: A. Thomas Cranmer

  1. John Bale’s King Johan is considered an early:

A. Mystery Play
B. Morality Play
C. History Play
D. Revenge Tragedy

Answer: C. History Play

  1. Which council made annual confession compulsory?

A. Council of Trent
B. Fourth Lateran Council
C. Council of Carthage
D. Synod of Dort

Answer: B. Fourth Lateran Council

  1. Zwingli believed the Eucharist was:

A. Literal transformation
B. Memorial remembrance
C. Spiritual sacrifice
D. Healing ritual

Answer: B. Memorial remembrance

  1. In Everyman, who guides the protagonist toward a good death?

A. Good Deeds
B. Knowledge
C. Confession
D. Discretion

Answer: B. Knowledge

  1. Which doctrine teaches salvation by faith alone?

A. Transubstantiation
B. Justification by Faith
C. Double Predestination
D. Auricular Confession

Answer: B. Justification by Faith

  1. The Black Rubric clarified that kneeling at Communion did not mean:

A. Repentance
B. Adoration of bread and wine
C. Loyalty to monarch
D. Belief in Trinity

Answer: B. Adoration of bread and wine

  1. Which Catholic apologist debated William Tyndale?

A. Cardinal Wolsey
B. Thomas More
C. Stephen Gardiner
D. Reginald Pole

Answer: B. Thomas More

  1. Milton’s Paradise Lost aims to:

A. Defend monarchy
B. Justify God’s ways to humanity
C. Promote Latin
D. Reject free will

Answer: B. Justify God’s ways to humanity

  1. Which poet wrote the Holy Sonnets?

A. George Herbert
B. Henry Vaughan
C. John Donne
D. Thomas Traherne

Answer: C. John Donne

  1. In King Johan, the Vice figure is:

A. Usurpid Powre
B. Dissymulacyon
C. Sedicyon
D. Privat Welth

Answer: C. Sedicyon

  1. Reformers translated Poenitentiam agite as:

A. Do penance
B. Repent
C. Confess
D. Acknowledge

Answer: B. Repent

  1. Foxe’s Acts and Monuments was required to be placed:

A. King’s Library
B. Beside the Great Bible in cathedrals
C. Every marketplace
D. Parliament House

Answer: B. Beside the Great Bible in cathedrals

  1. The 1552 Prayer Book rejected:

A. English language
B. Real Presence in Eucharist
C. Infant baptism
D. Royal authority

Answer: B. Real Presence in Eucharist

  1. Measure for Measure derives its title from which Gospel?

A. Matthew
B. Mark
C. Luke
D. John

Answer: A. Matthew

  1. Which movement sought a return to the early Church?

A. Counter-Reformation
B. Protestant Reformation
C. Gothic Revival
D. Scholasticism

Answer: B. Protestant Reformation

  1. Edward VI’s Second Reformation is noted for:

A. Destruction of images and relics
B. Burning English Bibles
C. Dissolving Parliament
D. Closing theatres

Answer: A. Destruction of images and relics

  1. What term refers to repairing the image of God in the soul after justification?

A. Election
B. Sanctification
C. Glorification
D. Attrition

Answer: B. Sanctification

  1. Paradise Regain’d focuses on:

A. Roman victory
B. Christ’s temptation in the wilderness
C. Christ’s childhood
D. Harrowing of Hell

Answer: B. Christ’s temptation in the wilderness

  1. Which doctrinal statement was issued in 1536?

A. Ten Articles
B. Six Articles
C. Thirty-Nine Articles
D. Augsburg Confession

Answer: A. Ten Articles

  1. Who first coined the term "metaphysical poets" in Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets?

A. John Dryden
B. Samuel Johnson
C. T. S. Eliot
D. Abraham Cowley

Answer: B. Samuel Johnson

  1. Which critic remarked that John Donne "affects the metaphysics" in his love poetry?

A. John Dryden
B. Samuel Johnson
C. Izaak Walton
D. Ben Jonson

Answer: A. John Dryden

  1. According to Samuel Johnson, metaphysical wit is:

A. A comparison of similar objects
B. A combination of dissimilar images
C. A lyrical nature description
D. A strict classical style

Answer: B. A combination of dissimilar images

  1. T. S. Eliot’s essay The Metaphysical Poets reviewed:

A. The Oxford Book of English Verse
B. Grierson’s Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems
C. Johnson’s Lives of the Poets
D. Saintsbury’s Caroline Poets

Answer: B. Grierson’s Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems

  1. What did Eliot claim English poetry never recovered from?

A. The Reformation
B. The Restoration
C. Dissociation of Sensibility
D. The Industrial Revolution

Answer: C. Dissociation of Sensibility

  1. In A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, the lovers’ souls are compared to:

A. A globe
B. The twin feet of a compass
C. Falling stars
D. Gold beaten thin

Answer: B. The twin feet of a compass

  1. Who became Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in 1621?

A. George Herbert
B. John Donne
C. Andrew Marvell
D. Richard Crashaw

Answer: B. John Donne

  1. George Herbert’s major collection is:

A. The Cathedral
B. The Church
C. The Temple
D. Steps to the Temple

Answer: C. The Temple

  1. The theme of To His Coy Mistress is:

A. Memento Mori
B. Carpe Diem
C. Amor Fati
D. Stoicism

Answer: B. Carpe Diem

  1. Who wrote the shaped poems The Altar and Easter Wings?

A. John Donne
B. George Herbert
C. Henry Vaughan
D. Abraham Cowley

Answer: B. George Herbert

  1. Samuel Johnson said metaphysical poets:

A. Linked ideas by love
B. Yoked heterogeneous ideas together
C. Followed nature
D. Ignored intellect

Answer: B. Yoked heterogeneous ideas together

  1. In Marvell’s poem, love is described as:

A. Spiritual
B. Vegetable
C. Eternal
D. Impossible

Answer: B. Vegetable

  1. Mario Praz called which poet the greatest Baroque stylist?

A. Richard Crashaw
B. John Donne
C. Andrew Marvell
D. Henry Vaughan

Answer: A. Richard Crashaw

  1. In Donne’s The Flea, the flea symbolizes:

A. Death
B. Marriage and union
C. Disease
D. Human insignificance

Answer: B. Marriage and union

  1. Which work by Donne defends suicide?

A. Devotions upon Emergent Occasions
B. Biathanatos
C. Pseudo-Martyr
D. Ignatius His Conclave

Answer: B. Biathanatos

  1. Donne’s career is often summarized as:

A. Saint Donne
B. Jack Donne to Dr. Donne
C. Sir John
D. Dean Donne

Answer: B. Jack Donne to Dr. Donne

  1. Who wrote An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland?

A. Abraham Cowley
B. Andrew Marvell
C. John Milton
D. Robert Herrick

Answer: B. Andrew Marvell

  1. In Herbert’s The Collar, the title does NOT suggest:

A. Priest’s collar
B. Choler (anger)
C. Color of church walls
D. Caller (God)

Answer: C. Color of church walls

  1. Which poet published poems at age thirteen?

A. John Donne
B. Abraham Cowley
C. Andrew Marvell
D. George Herbert

Answer: B. Abraham Cowley

  1. Eliot argued that for Donne, a thought was:

A. A formula
B. An experience modifying sensibility
C. Pure intellect
D. A burden

Answer: B. An experience modifying sensibility

  1. The Humber River is associated with:

A. London
B. Hull
C. Oxford
D. Cambridge

Answer: B. Hull

  1. Who wrote Silex Scintillans?

A. Richard Crashaw
B. Henry Vaughan
C. Thomas Traherne
D. George Herbert

Answer: B. Henry Vaughan

  1. The literal meaning of "metaphysical" is:

A. Before the physical
B. After the physical
C. Beyond the mind
D. Beside the physical

Answer: B. After the physical

  1. Which poet’s work was rediscovered in 1937?

A. Thomas Traherne
B. Edward Taylor
C. John Norris
D. Abraham Cowley

Answer: B. Edward Taylor

  1. Eliot identified which poets as worsening the dissociation of sensibility?

A. Donne and Herbert
B. Milton and Dryden
C. Marvell and Cowley
D. Shakespeare and Jonson

Answer: B. Milton and Dryden

  1. Classicism is based on the principles of:

A. Medieval Europe
B. Ancient Greece and Rome
C. Victorian England
D. Renaissance Italy

Answer: B. Ancient Greece and Rome

  1. Which is NOT a characteristic of Classicism?

A. Simplicity
B. Proportion
C. Excessive ornamentation
D. Clarity

Answer: C. Excessive ornamentation

  1. The classical unities derive from:

A. Horace
B. Plato
C. Aristotle’s Poetics
D. Longinus

Answer: C. Aristotle’s Poetics

  1. Unity of Time requires action within:

A. One week
B. Twelve hours
C. Twenty-four hours
D. One scene

Answer: C. Twenty-four hours

  1. Which writer belongs to the classical tradition?

A. Caspar David Friedrich
B. Alexander Pope
C. William Wordsworth
D. Mary Shelley

Answer: B. Alexander Pope

  1. Romanticism is often seen as a shift from:

A. Rational to Emotional
B. Simple to Complex
C. Pagan to Christian
D. Visual to Auditory

Answer: A. Rational to Emotional

  1. The Oath of the Horatii is a masterpiece of:

A. Romanticism
B. Neoclassicism
C. Baroque
D. Mannerism

Answer: B. Neoclassicism

  1. Which playwright ignored the classical unities?

A. Corneille
B. Racine
C. Shakespeare
D. Molière

Answer: C. Shakespeare

  1. Weimar Classicism centered on:

A. Voltaire and Rousseau
B. Goethe and Schiller
C. Dryden and Pope
D. Swift and Addison

Answer: B. Goethe and Schiller

  1. The Enlightenment emphasized:

A. Intuition
B. Reason and science
C. Superstition
D. Industrialization

Answer: B. Reason and science

  1. Who wrote Candide?

A. Rousseau
B. Diderot
C. Voltaire
D. Dryden

Answer: C. Voltaire

  1. According to Rousseau, individuals submit to:

A. Divine Right
B. General Will
C. Aristocracy
D. Conscience

Answer: B. General Will

  1. British architecture was influenced by:

A. Alberti
B. Brunelleschi
C. Andrea Palladio
D. Inigo Jones

Answer: C. Andrea Palladio

  1. Which sculpture symbolizes classical ideals?

A. Apollo Belvedere
B. Venus de Milo
C. Classical Apollo
D. David

Answer: C. Classical Apollo

  1. Classical melodies were viewed as:

A. Emotional overflow
B. Language of the heart
C. Dense counterpoint
D. Meaningless tones

Answer: B. Language of the heart

  1. Unity of Action requires:

A. One setting
B. One plot
C. One hero
D. Multiple plots

Answer: B. One plot

  1. Neoclassicism reacted against:

A. Realism
B. Rococo
C. Gothic
D. Academicism

Answer: B. Rococo

  1. Who edited the Encyclopédie?

A. Pope
B. Diderot
C. Coleridge
D. Schiller

Answer: B. Diderot

  1. Twentieth-century classicism preferred:

A. Dionysian impulses
B. Apollonian impulses
C. Emotionalism
D. Subjectivity

Answer: B. Apollonian impulses

  1. Palladian architecture emphasizes:

A. Wild nature
B. Symmetry and proportion
C. Baroque ornament
D. Irregularity

Answer: B. Symmetry and proportion

  1. Socrates believed life should be guided by:

A. Wealth
B. Reason and values
C. Political power
D. Myths

Answer: B. Reason and values

  1. Which movement saw itself as a classical revolt?

A. Pre-Raphaelites
B. Barbizon School
C. Impressionism
D. Surrealism

Answer: A. Pre-Raphaelites

  1. The Classical Era in music is represented by:

A. Bach and Handel
B. Haydn and Mozart
C. Beethoven and Wagner
D. Chopin and Liszt

Answer: B. Haydn and Mozart

  1. What is the swelling curve in a column called?

A. Entablature
B. Entasis
C. Pediment
D. Pilaster

Answer: B. Entasis

  1. Neoclassical art commonly drew subjects from:

A. Everyday life
B. Psychology
C. Roman history and Greek mythology
D. Industrial landscapes

Answer: C. Roman history and Greek mythology

  1. Which period is generally recognized as the peak of the Romantic movement in the Western world?

A. 1750–1800
B. 1800–1850
C. 1850–1900
D. 1789–1830

Answer: B. 1800–1850

  1. The first Romantic ideas emerged from which German movement?

A. Neoclassicism
B. Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress)
C. Realism
D. Transcendentalism

Answer: B. Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress)

  1. Romantic writers primarily prioritized:

A. Formal rules and grammar
B. Objective social issues
C. Emotions, imagination, and individual experience
D. Scientific rationalization

Answer: C. Emotions, imagination, and individual experience

  1. The Romantic Age in English literature is traditionally marked by the publication of:

A. The Prelude
B. Frankenstein
C. Lyrical Ballads
D. Songs of Innocence

Answer: C. Lyrical Ballads

  1. Which historical event inspired many Romantic poets?

A. French Revolution
B. American Revolution
C. Industrial Revolution
D. Glorious Revolution

Answer: A. French Revolution

  1. Romanticism emerged largely as a reaction against:

A. Enlightenment
B. French Revolution
C. Industrial Revolution
D. Renaissance

Answer: C. Industrial Revolution

  1. Who is known as the "King of Pessimism"?

A. William Wordsworth
B. Nathaniel Hawthorne
C. Edgar Allan Poe
D. Herman Melville

Answer: C. Edgar Allan Poe

  1. The Romantic "sublime" refers to:

A. Symmetry and balance
B. Order and logic
C. Awe, wonder, and terror in nature
D. Urban landscapes

Answer: C. Awe, wonder, and terror in nature

  1. Which Goethe novel shaped Romantic ideals across Europe?

A. The Robbers
B. Faust
C. The Sorrows of Young Werther
D. Der Sandmann

Answer: C. The Sorrows of Young Werther

  1. Wordsworth called whom "the marvellous Boy"?

A. Thomas Chatterton
B. John Keats
C. Percy Shelley
D. Robert Burns

Answer: A. Thomas Chatterton

  1. The idea of the "noble savage" is associated with:

A. Immanuel Kant
B. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
C. William Godwin
D. Thomas Paine

Answer: B. Jean-Jacques Rousseau

  1. Which Romantic novel critiques scientific advancement?

A. Moby-Dick
B. Frankenstein
C. Prometheus Unbound
D. The Scarlet Letter

Answer: B. Frankenstein

  1. The Byronic Hero first became famous through:

A. Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
B. Don Juan
C. The Giaour
D. Manfred

Answer: A. Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage

  1. Sir Walter Scott is credited with inventing the:

A. Gothic Novel
B. Epistolary Novel
C. Historical Novel
D. Picaresque Novel

Answer: C. Historical Novel

  1. Wordsworth’s reverence for nature was often viewed as:

A. Atheism
B. Pantheism
C. Rationalism
D. Nihilism

Answer: B. Pantheism

  1. Which legendary bard inspired early Romanticism?

A. Homer
B. Milton
C. Ossian
D. Virgil

Answer: C. Ossian

  1. Dark Romanticism developed as a reaction against:

A. Puritanism
B. Transcendentalism
C. Classicism
D. Realism

Answer: B. Transcendentalism

  1. Women’s Romantic-era studies often define the period as:

A. 1798–1832
B. 1776–1848
C. 1800–1850
D. 1789–1830

Answer: B. 1776–1848

  1. Which poet wrote the sonnet about reading Homer?

A. Coleridge
B. John Keats
C. William Blake
D. Lord Byron

Answer: B. John Keats

  1. Wordsworth argued poetry should use:

A. Poetic diction
B. Language of common people
C. Heroic couplets
D. Latin vocabulary

Answer: B. Language of common people

  1. Who wrote "Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world"?

A. Wordsworth
B. Coleridge
C. Percy Bysshe Shelley
D. Keats

Answer: C. Percy Bysshe Shelley

  1. Romantics idealized the Middle Ages because of:

A. Science
B. Rationalism
C. Chivalry and closeness to nature
D. Religious persecution

Answer: C. Chivalry and closeness to nature

  1. Dark Romantics believed humans are:

A. Naturally good
B. Sinful and fallible
C. Purely rational
D. Environmentally determined

Answer: B. Sinful and fallible

  1. Romantic literature often portrayed factory workers as:

A. National heroes
B. Industrial leaders
C. Dehumanized cogs in machinery
D. Social reformers

Answer: C. Dehumanized cogs in machinery

  1. Romanticism declined with the rise of:

A. Neoclassicism
B. Realism
C. Modernism
D. Existentialism

Answer: B. Realism

  1. In which year was the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood founded?

A. 1837
B. 1848
C. 1850
D. 1853

Answer: B. 1848

  1. Who were the founders of the PRB?

A. Rossetti, Morris, Burne-Jones
B. Rossetti, Millais, Holman Hunt
C. Ruskin, Millais, Hunt
D. Rossetti siblings and Hunt

Answer: B. Rossetti, Millais, Holman Hunt

  1. The central motto of the PRB was:

A. Art for Art’s Sake
B. Truth to Nature
C. Classical Idealism
D. Grand Manner

Answer: B. Truth to Nature

  1. What was the PRB magazine called?

A. The Pre-Raphaelite
B. The Germ
C. The Yellow Book
D. Art and Poetry

Answer: B. The Germ

  1. After two issues, The Germ was renamed:

A. Nature in Poetry
B. Art and Poetry
C. Brotherhood Monthly
D. Aesthetic Review

Answer: B. Art and Poetry

  1. Which critic defended the PRB?

A. Charles Dickens
B. John Ruskin
C. Matthew Arnold
D. Walter Pater

Answer: B. John Ruskin

  1. Which Millais painting was attacked by Dickens?

A. Ophelia
B. Mariana
C. Christ in the House of His Parents
D. Autumn Leaves

Answer: C. Christ in the House of His Parents

  1. Who modeled for Ophelia?

A. Jane Morris
B. Elizabeth Siddal
C. Christina Rossetti
D. Effie Gray

Answer: B. Elizabeth Siddal

  1. In The Light of the World, the door symbolizes:

A. Heaven
B. The human heart
C. Religious barriers
D. Eden

Answer: B. The human heart

  1. Which Rossetti work is called the prototype of aesthetic prose?

A. The Blessed Damozel
B. Hand and Soul
C. The Germ
D. Proserpine

Answer: B. Hand and Soul

  1. Leaders of the second generation of Pre-Raphaelites were:

A. Hunt and Millais
B. Morris and Burne-Jones
C. Solomon and Hughes
D. Christina Rossetti and Jane Morris

Answer: B. Morris and Burne-Jones

  1. William Morris founded the:

A. Aesthetic Movement
B. Arts and Crafts Movement
C. Surrealist Movement
D. Gothic Revival

Answer: B. Arts and Crafts Movement

  1. Elizabeth Siddal exhibited with the PRB in:

A. 1848
B. 1851
C. 1857
D. 1862

Answer: C. 1857

  1. Rossetti called beautiful models:

A. Angels
B. Stunners
C. Muses
D. Graces

Answer: B. Stunners

  1. The Awakening Conscience deals with:

A. Religious conversion
B. Fallen woman theme
C. Poverty
D. Child labor

Answer: B. Fallen woman theme

  1. How many contributors worked on The Germ?

A. 7
B. 13
C. 3
D. 20

Answer: B. 13

  1. Who is the imaginary painter in Hand and Soul?

A. Fra Angelico
B. Chiaro dell’Erma
C. Giunta Pisano
D. Dante

Answer: B. Chiaro dell’Erma

  1. The PRB effectively dissolved when Millais joined:

A. Socialist League
B. Royal Academy
C. Oxford Union
D. National Gallery

Answer: B. Royal Academy

  1. Which pigment was a PRB favorite?

A. Prussian Blue
B. Emerald Green
C. Chrome Yellow
D. Madder Lake

Answer: B. Emerald Green

  1. Millais painted Ophelia using:

A. Watercolor over oil
B. Wet white ground technique
C. Egg tempera
D. Natural dyes

Answer: B. Wet white ground technique

  1. Simeon Solomon introduced:

A. Mythological monsters
B. Male stunners
C. Industrial themes
D. Abstract forms

Answer: B. Male stunners

  1. Rossetti painted Jane Morris as:

A. Lady Lilith
B. Proserpine
C. Beatrice
D. Venus

Answer: B. Proserpine

  1. Jane Morris specialized in:

A. Oil painting
B. Embroidery and textile design
C. Sculpture
D. Photography

Answer: B. Embroidery and textile design

  1. Millais painted Ophelia’s background at:

A. River Thames
B. Hogsmill River, Surrey
C. Kelmscott Manor
D. France

Answer: B. Hogsmill River, Surrey

  1. Goblin Market is often viewed as:

A. Religious poem
B. Feminist critique of male literary traditions
C. Romantic imitation
D. Gothic fantasy

Answer: B. Feminist critique of male literary traditions

  1. Which line by W. B. Yeats best represents the modernist sense of fragmentation?

A. Turning and turning in the widening gyre
B. Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold
C. The best lack all conviction
D. What rough beast, its hour come round at last

Answer: B. Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold

  1. According to Virginia Woolf, the primary duty of a writer is:

A. To depict typical characters
B. To narrate external events
C. To show the flickerings of the innermost consciousness
D. To promote social reform

Answer: C. To show the flickerings of the innermost consciousness

  1. Who first applied the term "stream of consciousness" to literary studies?

A. Virginia Woolf
B. James Joyce
C. May Sinclair
D. Dorothy Richardson

Answer: C. May Sinclair

  1. Literary Impressionism is considered a bridge between:

A. Romanticism and Realism
B. Realism and Modernism
C. Modernism and Postmodernism
D. Classicism and Symbolism

Answer: B. Realism and Modernism

  1. Which architect described a house as a "machine for living in"?

A. Frank Lloyd Wright
B. Mies van der Rohe
C. Le Corbusier
D. Walter Gropius

Answer: C. Le Corbusier

  1. Who wrote the manifesto "Five Points of a New Architecture"?

A. Pierre Jeanneret
B. Le Corbusier
C. Adolf Loos
D. Josef Hoffmann

Answer: B. Le Corbusier

  1. Which philosopher influenced stream-of-consciousness writers?

A. Nietzsche
B. Henri Bergson
C. Freud
D. Schopenhauer

Answer: B. Henri Bergson

  1. Surrealism was deeply influenced by:

A. Adler and Jung
B. Freud and Jung
C. William James and Mach
D. Lacan and Foucault

Answer: B. Freud and Jung

  1. Herman Bahr linked Impressionism with the theory of:

A. Einstein
B. Ernst Mach
C. Comte
D. Darwin

Answer: B. Ernst Mach

  1. Which Picasso painting helped initiate Modernism?

A. Guernica
B. Three Musicians
C. Les Demoiselles d’Avignon
D. Portrait of Kahnweiler

Answer: C. Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

  1. Modernism frequently used which technique?

A. Linear Realism
B. Collage and Parody
C. Naturalism
D. Absolute Originality

Answer: B. Collage and Parody

  1. Septimus Warren Smith in Mrs. Dalloway represents:

A. Social integration
B. Stable identity
C. Psychological fragmentation from war trauma
D. Objective reality

Answer: C. Psychological fragmentation from war trauma

  1. Which German movement reacted against industrialization?

A. Cubism
B. Impressionism
C. Expressionism
D. Futurism

Answer: C. Expressionism

  1. Who coined the word "Surrealist"?

A. Salvador Dalí
B. André Breton
C. Guillaume Apollinaire
D. Marcel Duchamp

Answer: C. Guillaume Apollinaire

  1. Virginia Woolf’s term for significant everyday experiences is:

A. Streams of Thought
B. Rhythms of Consciousness
C. Moments of Being
D. Mental Flickerings

Answer: C. Moments of Being

  1. How does Postmodernism differ from Modernism regarding truth?

A. Rejects truth entirely
B. Critiques claims to a single truth
C. Identical to Modernism
D. Relies on rationalism alone

Answer: B. Critiques claims to a single truth

  1. Which architectural feature allows ribbon windows?

A. Pilotis
B. Roof Garden
C. Free Plan
D. Reinforced concrete frame without load-bearing walls

Answer: D. Reinforced concrete frame without load-bearing walls

  1. Jean-François Lyotard defined the postmodern condition as:

A. Rejection of facts
B. Incredulity toward metanarratives
C. Industrial capitalism
D. Universal truth

Answer: B. Incredulity toward metanarratives

  1. Which Foucault work predicts the "death of man"?

A. Madness and Civilization
B. Discipline and Punish
C. The Order of Things
D. Archaeology of Knowledge

Answer: C. The Order of Things

  1. Derrida’s différance means:

A. Biological difference
B. Differing and deferring meaning
C. Stability of signs
D. Mathematical distinction

Answer: B. Differing and deferring meaning

  1. A simulacrum is:

A. Distorted reality
B. Historical reproduction
C. Copy without an original
D. Mental image

Answer: C. Copy without an original

  1. Foucault’s genealogy emphasizes:

A. Human intentions
B. Power and institutions
C. Universal truth
D. Intellectual progress

Answer: B. Power and institutions

  1. Logocentrism refers to:

A. Priority of writing
B. Priority of speech and presence
C. Rejection of God
D. Mathematical logic

Answer: B. Priority of speech and presence

  1. Which technique mixes different styles and genres?

A. Metafiction
B. Fabulation
C. Pastiche
D. Poioumena

Answer: C. Pastiche

  1. Lyotard argued that knowledge is legitimized through:

A. Consensus
B. Paralogy and new language games
C. Nation-state authority
D. Religion

Answer: B. Paralogy and new language games

  1. The Sokal Affair criticized:

A. Cultural Studies and Postmodern Theory
B. Physics
C. Realism
D. Analytic Philosophy

Answer: A. Cultural Studies and Postmodern Theory

  1. Venturi contrasted the "Duck" with the:

A. Steel Tower
B. Functional Box
C. Decorated Shed
D. Gothic Cathedral

Answer: C. Decorated Shed

  1. Foucault’s "episteme" means:

A. Psychological state
B. Configuration of knowledge in an era
C. Universal mind structure
D. Political ideology

Answer: B. Configuration of knowledge in an era

  1. Derrida’s first major publication introduced the work of:

A. Edmund Husserl
B. Martin Heidegger
C. Friedrich Nietzsche
D. Rousseau

Answer: A. Edmund Husserl

  1. Fredric Jameson called Postmodernism:

A. Return of authentic experience
B. Cultural logic of late capitalism
C. Triumph of reason
D. End of art

Answer: B. Cultural logic of late capitalism

  1. Foucault’s "technologies of the self" are:

A. State surveillance
B. Practices of self-transformation
C. Industrial automation
D. Repression of desire

Answer: B. Practices of self-transformation

  1. What term describes the disappearance of the distinction between reality and representation?

A. Intertextuality
B. Hyperreality
C. Bricolage
D. Decentring

Answer: B. Hyperreality

  1. Jonathan Franzen advocates:

A. Scientific Realism
B. Tragic Realism
C. Surrealism
D. Hyper-Irony

Answer: B. Tragic Realism

  1. Derrida’s "Trace" refers to:

A. Visible mark of origin
B. Presence never fully present
C. Historical record
D. Scientific proof

Answer: B. Presence never fully present

  1. Who wrote Orientalism (1978)?

A. Homi Bhabha
B. Edward Said
C. Gayatri Spivak
D. Frantz Fanon

Answer: B. Edward Said

  1. Bhabha’s concept of "Mimicry" means:

A. Cultural mixture
B. Rejection of English
C. Colonized imitation that is "almost the same but not quite"
D. Subaltern resistance

Answer: C. Colonized imitation that is "almost the same but not quite"

  1. Spivak summarized colonial discourse as:

A. Black men saving white women
B. Brown men saving brown women
C. White men saving brown women from brown men
D. White women saving brown women

Answer: C. White men saving brown women from brown men

  1. Which writer abandoned English to write in Gikuyu?

A. Chinua Achebe
B. Wole Soyinka
C. Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o
D. Ben Okri

Answer: C. Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o

  1. The Empire Writes Back was written by:

A. Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin
B. Said, Bhabha, and Spivak
C. Guha, Chakrabarty, and Chatterjee
D. Fanon, Achebe, and Ngũgĩ

Answer: A. Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin

  1. Founder of Subaltern Studies:

A. Dipesh Chakrabarty
B. Ranajit Guha
C. Bipan Chandra
D. Anil Seal

Answer: B. Ranajit Guha

  1. Abrogation means:

A. Adopting standard English
B. Rejecting the idea of "correct" English
C. Erasing native languages
D. Translating into Latin

Answer: B. Rejecting the idea of "correct" English

  1. Wide Sargasso Sea is a prequel to:

A. Mansfield Park
B. Jane Eyre
C. Vanity Fair
D. Heart of Darkness

Answer: B. Jane Eyre

  1. The term "Subaltern" comes from:

A. Machiavelli
B. Antonio Gramsci
C. Umberto Eco
D. Agamben

Answer: B. Antonio Gramsci

  1. Bhabha’s term for the colonizer-colonized relationship is:

A. Alienation
B. Ambivalence
C. Authenticity
D. Appropriation

Answer: B. Ambivalence

  1. Who wrote The Wretched of the Earth?

A. Edward Said
B. Frantz Fanon
C. Stuart Hall
D. Paul Gilroy

Answer: B. Frantz Fanon

  1. In Spivak’s theory, Vertreten means:

A. Artistic representation
B. Speaking for others
C. Translation
D. Erasure

Answer: B. Speaking for others

  1. Who criticized Heart of Darkness as racist?

A. Wole Soyinka
B. Ben Okri
C. Chinua Achebe
D. Buchi Emecheta

Answer: C. Chinua Achebe

  1. Negritude was developed by Senghor and:

A. Aimé Césaire
B. Frantz Fanon
C. Sartre
D. Homi Bhabha

Answer: A. Aimé Césaire

  1. Which Jane Austen novel is critiqued in Culture and Imperialism?

A. Pride and Prejudice
B. Sense and Sensibility
C. Mansfield Park
D. Emma

Answer: C. Mansfield Park

  1. According to Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, colonization of the mind occurs primarily through:

A. Military force
B. Economic exploitation
C. Language and education
D. Religion

Answer: C. Language and education

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