Contexts of British Prose After 1925 - AP English Literature and Composition

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Question

Which of the following is not a dystopian novel?

Answer

The only one of these novels not set in a fictional dystopia is James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake, an incredibly experimental work that vaguely follows various characters through a dreamlike, nebulous plot.

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Question

Which of the following recent British novels did not win the Booker Prize?

Answer

Only Zadie Smith’s White Teeth has not won the Booker Prize. Anne Enright’s The Gathering won in 2007, Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries won in 2013, Richard Flanagan’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North won in 2014, and Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss won in 2006.

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Question

Which of the following authors was a source for I, Claudius?

Answer

The ancient Greek historian Plutarch as well as the Roman historian Suetonius provided much of the background material for I, Claudius (1934). None of the others writers would have had information about Emperor Claudius, since he was not born until after their deaths.

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Question

During what decade was I, Claudius published?

Answer

I, Claudius was published in 1934.

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Question

Which of the following historical figures does not appear in I, Claudius?

Answer

All of the above figures were contemporaries of the Emperor Claudius (10 BCE to 54 CE) except for Homer (c.800 BCE to c.750 BCE).

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Question

Who is the author of Atonement?

Answer

Atonement (2001) is Ian McEwan’s eighth novel.

Kazuo Ishiguro is the author of A Pale View of Hills (1982), Martin Amis is the author of Dead Babies (1975), Julian Barnes is the author of Arthur and George (2005), and Pat Barker is the author of the Regeneration Trilogy (1991, 1993, 1995).

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Question

During what decade was Atonement published?

Answer

Ian McEwan's Atonement was published in 2001, the same year that it was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

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Question

During what war is Atonement set?

Answer

Ian McEwan's Atonement is set partly in 1935 and partly in present-day England, but a significant portion of the action occurs during World War II in both France and England.

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Question

Which of the following is not another novel by the author of Atonement?

Answer

The Sense of an Ending is a 2011 novel by Julian Barnes. Enduring Love (1997), Saturday (2005), Solar (2010), and The Cement Garden (1978) are all by Ian McEwan.

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Question

Who is the author of Brideshead Revisited?

Answer

Brideshead Revisited (1945) is Evelyn Waugh’s most famous novel and the work he considered his magnum opus.

Kingsley Amis wrote Lucky Jim (1954), Graham Greene wrote The Third Man (1950), Ian McEwan wrote Solar (2010), and D.H Lawrence wrote Sons and Lovers (1913).

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Question

During what decade was Brideshead Revisited published?

Answer

Brideshead Revisited was written after the author’s parachute accident in 1943 and was published in 1945.

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Question

During what decade is Brideshead Revisited mainly set?

Answer

Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited (1945) begins in the 1920s in Britain and concludes in the late 1940s, shortly after the end of World War II.

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Question

Which of the following is not another novel by the author of Brideshead Revisited?

Answer

Decline and Fall (1928), A Handful of Dust (1934), Scoop (1938), and The Loved One (1948) are all by Evelyn Waugh. The Quiet American is a 1955 novel by the English author Graham Greene.

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Question

Which of the following is least likely to be the title of a (hypothetical) critical essay about Anthony Burgess’ 1962 novel A Clockwork Orange?

Answer

Burgess’ dystopian novel concerns a troubled teenage boy who speaks in a distinctive fictional slang (Nadsat) and perpetrates violent crimes in his society. This character, Alex, is later imprisoned and punished through the use of movies and aversive conditioning. Love and religion do not play important roles in the novel.

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Question

George Orwell’s 1945 novel Animal Farm is an elaborate political allegory for which of the following?

Answer

Orwell’s famous Animal Farm uses pigs, horses, dogs, and other animals to allegorize the 1917 Russian Revolution and subsequent rise of communism. In the novel, specific animals such as Napoleon and Snowball stand in for major political figures such as Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, and Leon Trotsky.

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Question

Which of the following is the setting for Hilary Mantel’s two-time Booker Prize-winning Wolf Hall trilogy?

Answer

Considered one of the best works of English historical fiction in the last century, Mantel’s trilogy is set during the English Reformation and follows the rise of the Church of England and the machinations of historical characters such as Thomas Cromwell, Anne Boleyn, Cardinal Wolsey, and Henry VIII.

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Question

Which of the following is an integral literary device in To the Lighthouse?

Answer

The novel, written by Virginia Woolf in 1927, is a classic example of modernist stream-of-consciousness. Although the plot centers around a family’s vacations to a Scottish island, it is much more concerned with consciousness, emotions, and perceptions than with fast-paced action or plot.

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Question

Which of these British authors had a fatwa placed on him or her by the Iranian government for his or her allegedly blasphemous novel The Satanic Verses?

Answer

This author is Salman Rushdie, whose other works include Midnight’s Children and The Moor's Last Sigh. Rushdie’s work is known for its frequent use of magical realism, Indian settings, and historical subject matter. In 1989, Iran called for Rushdie’s assassination in response to the author’s portrayal of Islam in his writing.

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Question

Which of the following is least likely to be the title of a (hypothetical) critical essay about Aldous Huxley’s 1932 novel Brave New World?

Answer

Set in the fictional and futuristic World State dictatorship, Huxley’s novel is darkly dystopian and concerns a society where natural reproduction no longer occurs. Instead, babies are grown in scientific labs and separated into artificial castes, where they are conditioned and raised to have only a certain level of intelligence. The novel centers on the relationship between two characters, Lenina Crowne and Bernard Marx, and the various ways in which they defy societal expectations and rules. The only subject not covered in this novel is gender identity.

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Question

Which of the following contemporary British authors is known for her three novels about World War I and for her use of real English poet-soldiers such as Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon as characters?

Answer

The author is Pat Barker, and the novels are Regeneration, The Eye in the Door, and The Ghost Road. The works concern the lives and mental illnesses of several English soldiers (including Sassoon and Owen) in a psychiatric hospital during World War I.

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