Answering Other Questions About Twentieth-Century Fiction

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Questions 1 - 3
1

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded to an author for __________.

an entire career of literary achievement

an author's literary output in a single year

a singular achievement in composing one novel

a singular achievement in composing one poem

excellent work in multiple genres

Explanation

The Nobel Prize in Literature, first established by Alfred Nobel's will in 1895, rewards authors for their total "work," which is read by the prize committee to mean an author's entire output for their career. The Nobel prize can be given to an author working in any field of literature, be it fiction, poetry, or even nonfiction. Usually, the Nobel Prize is seen as capping the career of an author, and is awarded usually to older writers.

2

Which twentieth-century novel features a detailed rumination on “kitsch"?

The Unbearable Lightness of Being

Pale Fire

The Stranger

The Swell Season

All Quiet on the Western Front

Explanation

Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being features the 1968 Prague spring uprising as a background story for its characters' lives. The novel also discusses many philosophical themes, particularly the low-art known as "kitsch." Kundera's discussion of kitsch helps reflect on the "lightness" in the title of the novel.

3

In a novel, a narrator that can see every event and understands every character's motivation is describes as a __________.

third person omniscient narrator

third person limited narrator

second person narrator

first person narrator

multiple first person narrators

Explanation

A third person narrator describes a narrator whose perspective is from outside any individual's own thoughts. An omniscient narrator describes a narrator that knows and understands every event and character motivation. This is one of the most common kinds of narration, along with first person narration, which is told from the point of view of a single character. A third person limited omniscient narrator has a perspective from outside, but can only understand the motivation of one, primary character. A first person narrator uses "I" and narrates from one character's perspective. A second person narrator uses "you."

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