All GRE Subject Test: Literature in English Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #143 : Identification
Which of the following was not likely to be seen in pre-twentieth-century American theater?
Racy burlesque acts
Boycotts or bans by religious institutions
Jazz poetry
Blackface
American actors performing “imported” British dramas such as Richard III or The Merchant of Venice
Jazz poetry
Of all the options listed above, only jazz poetry developed after 1900.
Example Question #1 : Identification Of American Plays
Blanche DuBois, Stella Kowalski, and Harold Mitchell are major characters from which of the following plays?
Mourning Becomes Electra
Twelve Angry Men
A Streetcar Named Desire
Our Town
Death of a Salesman
A Streetcar Named Desire
These are central characters in Tennessee Williams' 1947 American play, A Streetcar Named Desire. The plot follows Blanche Dubois who abandons her previous life of aristocracy after a series of personal failures to live with her brother and sister-in-law in New Orleans. It won the Pulitzer Prize in 1948.
Example Question #5 : Identification Of American Plays
Mary Cavan Tyrone, James Tyrone, and Cathleen are main characters in which of the following American plays?
A Raisin in the Sun
‘night Mother
The Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Six Degrees of Separation
Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Mary Cavan Tyrone, James Tyrone, and Cathleen are primary characters in Eugene O'Neill's 1956 play, Long Day's Journey Into Night. It is a drama written in four parts between 1941 and 1942. It was the Pulitzer Prize winner in 1957.
Example Question #1 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
Which of the following is an English-language opera that tells the story of a black beggar and his lover in Charleston, South Carolina and is often discussed in terms of its racial significance and shortcomings?
Porgy and Bess
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Anything Goes
Show Boat
West Side Story
Porgy and Bess
This question describes the 1934 Porgy and Bess, first performed in New York City by a controversial cast of all-African-American singers. The play is known for its jazz style, its famous song “Summertime” (since covered by many performers), and for its questionable perpetuation of racial stereotypes. It has gone in and out of fashion for the eighty years since its debut. The play introduces important questions such as the role of the black performer in theater and the use of stereotypes by white composers.
Example Question #7 : Identification Of American Plays
Who is the author of the canonical American play The Crucible?
Tennessee Williams
Eugene O’Neill
David Mamet
Arthur Miller
Tom Stoppard
Arthur Miller
The author is Arthur Miller, and the play, written in 1953, concerns the late-seventeenth-century Salem witch trials in the Massachusetts Bay province of America. The play is intended as an allegory of the 1950s Red Scare and McCarthyism, when the U.S. government became paranoid about the possibility of communism infiltrating the country. As a result of the play (which includes characters such as Abigail Williams, John and Elizabeth Proctor, Tituba, Mary William, Giles Corey, and Reverend Samuel Parris), Miller was questioned by the House Un-American Activities Committee and charged with contempt of Congress.
Example Question #1 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
Which Tennessee Williams “memory play” features the reminisces of Tom, the protagonist, about three other characters and is renowned for its examination of family ties and mental illness?
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Not About Nightingales
A Streetcar Named Desire
Candles to the Sun
The Glass Menagerie
The Glass Menagerie
The play in question is Williams’ 1944 play The Glass Menagerie. The play features narrator Tom Wingfield; matriarch Amanda Wingfield, whose husband abandoned the family and whose glory days as a Southern debutante have long faded; the cripplingly shy Laura Wingfield, Tom’s sister and Amanda’s daughter; and the deceitful prospective suitor Jim O’Connor.
Example Question #2 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
Which of the following works is based on a play by William Shakespeare?
West Side Story
A Streetcar Named Desire
Angels in America
A Raisin in the Sun
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
West Side Story
Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim’s West Side Story is based on Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Originally performed on Broadway in 1957, the musical is set in a neighborhood of immigrants in New York City’s Upper West Side. Like Romeo and Juliet, it includes themes such as love, death, loyalty, and family, but it is also concerned with tensions between immigrants and native citizens in America during the 1950s.
Example Question #3 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
Which American playwright is known for works such as Long Day’s Journey Into Night, The Iceman Cometh, and Mourning Becomes Electra?
Tom Stoppard
Eugene O’Neill
Tennessee Williams
Neil Simon
David Mamet
Eugene O’Neill
The playwright who wrote the plays listed is Eugene O’Neill, a native of New York City and a recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature. O’Neill is widely regarded as one of the most important dramatists in twentieth-century America, and his work makes use of American vernacular, characters who are outcasts or misfits, and a stark, sometimes relentless realism.
Example Question #4 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
This Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Tony Kushner focuses on sexuality and the AIDS epidemic in 1980s New York City.
The Way We Live Now
As Is
Andre’s Mother
Safe Sex
Angels in America
Angels in America
Although all the titles listed above are American plays dealing with AIDS, only the 1993 Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes was written by Tony Kushner. It is by far the most famous work of the Kushner’s and includes character doubling, interweaving storylines, and various angels and imaginary friends.
Example Question #1 : Identification Of American Plays After 1925
This 1965 comedy by Neil Simon follows the ill-suited relationship between roommates Felix Ungar and Oscar Madison. What play is it?
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
The Philadelphia Story
Waiting for Lefty
A Raisin in the Sun
The Odd Couple
The Odd Couple
The play described is The Odd Couple, which follows the tiffs and jokes of Oscar, a notoriously laidback slob, and Felix, an extremely organized neat-freak. The play’s main premise is that the two recently divorced main characters become roommates out of financial necessity but end up forming their own close relationship.
Certified Tutor
Certified Tutor