All GRE Subject Test: Literature in English Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #54 : Identification Of Plays
This Caribbean writer’s best known play is A Tempest, based on Shakespeare’s The Tempest and written with a postcolonial slant. Who is he?
Aimé Césaire
Stanley French
Fernando Arrabal
Mario Vargas Llosa
Ama Ata Aidoo
Aimé Césaire
This is Aimé Césaire, a French-educated native of Martinique and an incipient member of the négritude ideology. His work is often preoccupied with power, colonial rule, and racial identity.
Example Question #411 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
One of Peru’s most important writers, this poet and playwright used works such as There Is No Happy Island and A Certain Tic Tac to highlight urban crime, poverty, lingering colonial influences, and conditions on the streets of Lima. Who is he?
Sebastián Salazar Bondy
Julio Cortázar
Fernando Arrabal
Mario Vargas Llosa
Aimé Césaire
Sebastián Salazar Bondy
This is Sebastián Salazar Bondy, whose other notable works include Something That Wants to Die, There’s No Gasoline in Heaven, and Flora Tristán.
Example Question #52 : Identification Of Plays
This French playwright and champion of the Theatre of the Absurd movement was known for dramas including The Maids, The Balcony, and The Blacks.
Harald Pinter
Aimé Césaire
Jean Genet
Samuel Beckett
Eugène Ionesco
Jean Genet
This is Jean Genet, whose work often features social misfits or people on the outskirts of a community. His work, which is heavily steeped in absurdism, investigates morality as well as the constructs of racial and social identities.
Example Question #53 : Identification Of Plays
Which avant-garde Romanian writer was a significant figure in the Theatre of the Absurd?
Eugène Ionesco
Aimé Césaire
Constantin Brâncuși
Jean Genet
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Eugène Ionesco
This is Eugène Ionesco, whose works include The Rhinoceros, The Bald Soprano, and Exit the King. Ionesco plays often emphasize the pointlessness of human existence and utilize disorienting elements such as non-sequiturs, dreamlike storytelling, and jarring verbal feats.
Example Question #54 : Identification Of Plays
What is the name of the Ghanaian writer who wrote the play The Dilemma of a Ghost?
Aimé Césaire
Stanley French
Ama Ata Aidoo
Wole Solinka
Derek Walcott
Ama Ata Aidoo
This is Ama Ata Aidoo, a poet, playwright, and novelist. She often incorporates elements of African legend, cultural identity, gender studies, and feminism into her work.
Example Question #55 : Identification Of Plays
This Nigerian poet and dramatist, the first African Nobel Prize in Literature laureate, is known for plays such as The Lion and the Jewel, Kongi’s Harvest, and Death and the King’s Horsemen.
Wole Solinka
Ama Ata Aidoo
Derek Walcott
Aimé Césaire
Stanley French
Wole Solinka
The playwright in question is Wole Solinka. His work often concerns colonialism and contemporary African politics, government, and corruption. His plays have been said to be influenced by traditional Yoruba drama and theatre of the absurd.
Example Question #412 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
The German playwright and poet Bertolt Brecht wrote which of the following important anti-war plays?
The Caretaker
Waiting for Godot
Mother Courage and Her Children
The Rhinoceros
The Bird
Mother Courage and Her Children
Brecht’s works, among which are Mother Courage and Her Children and The Caucasian Chalk Circle, often encouraged audience participation and deep critical thinking. He is often considered a founder of Epic Theatre, although he chose to qualify or reject that classification. Mother Courage and Her Children is one of many of his plays written in response to the rise of Nazism.
Example Question #413 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
What Peruvian writer and Nobel laureate wrote the plays La Chunga; Pretty Eyes, Ugly Pictures; and The Madman of the Balconies?
Julio Cortázar
Fernando Arrabal
Mario Vargas Llosa
Sebastián Salazar Bondy
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Mario Vargas Llosa
This is Mario Vargas Llosa, one of the most influential Latin American writers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. His work (which includes novels and essays as well as drama) is often political and anti-nationalistic and is deeply invested in portraying power struggles between rulers and the poor or disenfranchised.
Example Question #1 : Contexts Of British Prose
There was a contention as far as a suit (in which, piety and dignity, religion and estimation, were mingled) which of the religious orders should ring to prayers first in the morning; and it was determined, that they should ring first that rose earliest. If we understand aright the dignity of this bell, that tolls for our evening prayer, we would be glad to make it ours, by rising early, in that application, that it might be ours as well as his, whose indeed it is. The bell doth toll for him, that thinks it doth; and though it intermit again, yet from that minute, that that occasion wrought upon him, he is united to God. Who casts not up his eye to the sun when it rises? But who takes off his eye from a comet, when that breaks out? who bends not his ear to any bell, which upon any occasion rings? But who can remove it from that bell, which is passing a piece of himself out of this world?
The author of this passage served as the Dean of which of the following cathedrals?
Saint Peter's
Saint Pancras
Saint Andrew's
Saint Patrick's
Saint Paul's
Saint Paul's
The author of the passage is John Donne, who served as the Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in London from 1621 until his death in 1631. This sermon was Donne's most famous piece of prose and is one that you should definitely know for the test.
Adapted from "Meditation XVII" in Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, and Severall Steps in My Sicknes by John Donne (1624)
Example Question #1 : Contexts Of Prose
What is considered the first English work of Gothic literature?
The Castle of Otranto
Jane Eyre
“The Fall of the House of Usher”
Frankenstein
The Mystery of Edwin Drood
The Castle of Otranto
British author Horace Walpole is widely considered the progenitor of the Gothic style, which is characterized by its mix of horror, romanticism, and macabre excess. Walpole’s 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto is usually described as the first work in this genre, although Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, Charles Dickens’ unfinished Mystery of Edwin Drood, and Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” are all more widely known works of Gothic literature.
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All GRE Subject Test: Literature in English Resources
