All GRE Subject Test: Literature in English Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Contexts Of British Prose 1660–1925
Which of the following are subjects of Wuthering Heights?
democracy and agrarian disputes
education and domestic subservience
nature and industrial advancements
childhood and federal crime
classism and a love triangle
classism and a love triangle
Wuthering Heights, published in 1847 by Emily Brönte, concerns jealousy and a love triangle between the lower-class Heathcliff, the middle-class Catherine Earnshaw, and the wealthy Edgar Linton.
Example Question #2 : Contexts Of British Prose
In James Joyce’s seminal modernist work Ulysses, a hapless dreamer named Leopold Bloom goes about his daily routine in which city?
Dublin
Belfast
London
Edinburgh
Cambridge
Dublin
Published in 1922, Ulysses occurs on a single day in Dublin. The novel is highly experimental, relying heavily on allusion, stream-of-consciousness, and esoteric wordplay.
Example Question #3 : Contexts Of British Prose
Which of the following male author names is actually the pseudonym of a female writer?
Henry Fielding
George Eliot
Thomas Hardy
Daniel Defoe
E. M. Forster
George Eliot
This is George Eliot, whose given name was Mary Anne Evans and who wrote nineteenth-century masterpieces such as Middlemarch, Daniel Deronda, and The Mill on the Floss. She is said to have used a pen name in part to protect her privacy and in part to ensure that her works would be taken seriously and not considered as representative of the light-hearted romances that women were assumed to write exclusively.
Example Question #4 : Contexts Of British Prose
With which movement is Oscar Wilde’s novel The Picture of Dorian Gray most closely associated?
Aestheticism
Empiricism
Expressionism
Modernism
Realism
Aestheticism
Published in 1891, The Picture of Dorian Gray investigates the relationship between aesthetics and morality. It does so through the story of a young man (Dorian Gray) who has a magical portrait painted of him (by Basil Hallward) that enables him to remain young and unblemished despite his increasingly repugnant and unethical actions. The novel’s emphasis on the utility of art and the artist and preoccupation with beautiful things make it most closely linked to aestheticism, which emphasizes form and style above all else.
Example Question #5 : Contexts Of British Prose
The 1726 work Gulliver’s Travels satirizes which then-popular type of writing?
Epic poem
Eclogue
Epistolary novel
Melodrama
Travelogue
Travelogue
Written by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels parodies the popular travelogues of eighteenth-century Europe. It was considered fashionable at the time to travel to an exotic land and then publish an account of the journey, but Swift’s satire transcends the genre by presenting a deeper investigation of human nature and social goods.
Example Question #3 : Contexts Of British Prose
Which of the following is the earliest novel written in English amongst the answer choices?
Clarissa
Don Quixote
Robinson Crusoe
Gulliver’s Travels
Pamela
Robinson Crusoe
Daniel Defoe’s 1719 Robinson Crusoe is the first novel written in English among these answer choices. While Miguel Cervantes’ Don Quixote precedes Robinson Crusoe by more than a hundred years, it originally was written in Spanish.
Example Question #1 : Contexts Of Prose
Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady is an early example of which style of novel?
Gothic
Pastoral
Epistolary
Tragicomic
Picaresque
Epistolary
Clarissa is an epistolary novel, or a novel written in the form of a series of letters. The story centers on its eponymous heroine and her tragic attempts to break free from her family’s conniving and preserve her honor.
Example Question #4 : Contexts Of British Prose
Which of the following is not a theme of Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein?
Politics
Secrecy
Aesthetics
The nature of knowledge
Insanity
Politics
Frankenstein investigates insanity in its probing of Dr. Frankenstein’s mental state; it investigates both secrecy and the nature of knowledge in its portrayal of the guilt and fear Dr. Frankenstein feels when he discovers but does not disclose powerful new information; and it investigates aesthetics when it contrasts the beautiful (various female characters) with the hideous (the monster). Politics is the only theme that does not play a major role in the novel.
Example Question #1 : Contexts Of British Prose 1660–1925
Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness is set in which of the following locations?
The Zambezi River
The Amazon River
The Congo River
The Nile River
The Mississippi River
The Congo River
Written in 1899, this classic and semi-autobiographical novella follows the adventures of the anti-hero Marlow up the Congo River as he seeks the ivory trader Kurtz. It examines issues such as racism, colonialism, madness, illness, and civilization.
Example Question #11 : Contexts Of British Prose 1660–1925
Charles Dickens’ 1859 novel A Tale of Two Cities was set during which significant historical event?
the Hundred Years’ War
the Industrial Revolution
the Great Fire of London
the American Revolution
the French Revolution
the French Revolution
A Tale of Two Cities takes place in the years leading up to and during the French Revolution (1789-1799). It concerns the adventures of Sydney Carton, his doppelgänger Charles Darnay, Lucie Manette and her father, the Defarges, Jacques One through Three, and the Crunchers.
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