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Saturday, 4 February 2023

NET PAPER-3 JANUARY 2017

 

NET PAPER-3 JANUARY 2017

1. Who among the following is not a diasporic writer?

(1) Beryl Bainbridge

(2) Timothy Mo

(3) Hanif Kureishi

(4) Sam Selvon

Answer: 1

Explanation:

Dame Beryl Margaret Bainbridge was an English writer from Liverpool. She was primarily known for her works of psychological fiction, often macabre tales set among the English working class. 

Timothy Peter Mo is a British Asian novelist. Born to a British mother and a Hong Kong father, Mo lived in Hong Kong until the age of 10, when he moved to Britain. 

Hanif Kureishi is a British playwright, screenwriter, filmmaker and novelist of South Asian and English descent

Samuel Selvon  was a Trinidad-born writer, who moved to London, England, in the 1950s. His 1956 novel The Lonely Londoners is groundbreaking in its use of creolised English, or "nation language", for narrative as well as dialogue.


2. “A text is not a line of words releasing a single ‘theological’ meaning (the ‘message’ of the Author-God) but a multi-dimensional space in which a variety of writings, none of them original, blend and clash. The text is a tissue of quotations drawn from the innumerable centres of culture.”

Which of the following best expresses the position stated above?

(1) A text is a tissue of lies that has no referential and cultural validity.

(2) A text is a communication from the Author-God with multiple meanings.

(3) A text is a force field of ambiguity where meanings collapse in the face of opposition.

(4) A text is a linguistic construct without any unity of meaning and is linked to multiple sources of language and culture.

Answer: 4

 

3. In William Congreve’s The Way of the World Fainall is Lady Wishfort’s

(1) Son

(2) Son-in-law

(3) Nephew

(4) Servant

Answer: 2

 Explanation: The antagonist of the play, Fainall is a sneaky, insecure, and traitorous fellow with a not so good reputation around town—basically, he has all the negative qualities that Mirabell does not. 

He is the second husband of Lady Wishfort's daughter, Mrs. Arabella Fainall


4. Match the periodical with the founder/s :

List – I

A. The Egoist

B. The English Review

C. Blast

D. Poetry : A Magazine of Verse

List – II

I. Wyndham Lewis and Ezra Pound

II. Harriet Monroe

III. Harriet Weaver and Dora Marsden

IV. Ford Madox Ford

Codes :

A B C D

(1) II III I IV

(2) III I IV II

(3) III IV I II

(4) III II I IV

Answer: 3

 

5. Which statement best expresses the theme of Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”?

(1) To kill a living creature is immoral.

(2) People should honour and respect all living things.

(3) Prayer can accomplish miracles.

(4) True harmony is achieved only through cooperative effort.

Answer: 2

 Explanation:

The poem tells the tragic events of the sailor’s ship trapped near Antarctica by a terrible storm that puts the lives of the entire crew at risk. A great albatross, a good wish bird, lays on the ship’s tree indicating the way to salvation, but is seamlessly killed by the sailor with his crossbow.

The crew die of curse and the Mariner is left alone on the rotting deck to experience extremities of horror, anguish and remorse for seven days and nights.

The Wedding-Guest is so powerfully affected by the story, and by next morning feels that he has become both more serious and wiser than before.

 The main theme of the ballad is to respect every living thing and to treat it with kindness.


6. “The Comprehensible Output Hypothesis” was proposed by

(1) Stephen Krashen

(2) M.A.K. Halliday

(3) Merrill Swain

(4) Gertrude Buck

Answer: 3

 

7. In Tristram Shandy Corporal Trim’s brother Tom describes the oppression of a black servant in a sausage shop in Lisbon that he visited. This episode is inspired by a letter Laurence Sterne received from a black man. Sterne’s reply became an integral part of 18th century abolitionist literature.

Name the person who wrote the aforementioned letter to Sterne.

(1) William Wilberforce

(2) Ignatius Sancho

(3) William Blackstone

(4) John Hawkins

Answer: 2

 Explanation: Sterne wrote numerous letters and editorials, and was able to utilize the growing genre of the novel to share his opinions on the subject. Sterne had connections with other well-known persons, including Ignatius Sancho. In fact, some of Sancho's widely-read letters were written to Sterne. 

Ignatius Sancho is the first known person of African descent to vote in a British general election.


8. In Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage and Her Children, which song does Yvette sing to Mother Courage and Kattrin?

(1) “The Song of the Great Souls of the Earth”

(2) “The Fraternization Song”

(3) “The Song of the Great Capitulation”

(4) “The Memorial Song”

Answer: 2

 Yvette sings it in "The Fraternization Song," telling of his arrival, their affair, and his departure.


9. In Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, under what pretext does Emma go every week for her clandestine meeting with Leon in Rouen?

(1) Under the pretext of going to the church for weekly confession.

(2) Under the pretext of meeting her blind friend who lives alone.

(3) Under the pretext of weekly shopping.

(4) Under the pretext of taking piano lessons.

Answer: 4

 

10. Identify the two books by C.S. Lakshmi (Ambai) published in English translation :

I. Astride the Wheel

II. Going Home

III. A Purple Sea

IV. In a Forest, A Deer

The right combination according to the code is

(1) III and II

(2) I and II

(3) I and IV

(4) III and IV

Answer: 4 

C.S. Lakshmi, writing under the pseudonym of Ambai, is a feminist Tamil writer. She was born in 1944 in Tamil Nadu, and grew up in Bangalore and Mumbai. 


11. Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnets from the Portuguese is

I. a sequence of forty four Petrarchan sonnets.

II. a rewriting of Popean didactic verse.

III. a depiction of a contemporary setting and small events of ordinary life.

IV. a scathing criticism of the British colonial enterprise.

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) I and III

(3) II and IV

(4) I and IV

Answer: 2

 It is rritten for Robert Browning, who had affectionately nicknamed her his "little Portuguese," the sequence is a celebration of marriage, and of one of the most famous romances of the nineteenth century.


12. In The Story of My Experiments with Truth, M.K. Gandhi covers the narrative of his life from early childhood through to

(1) 1925

(2) 1929

(3) 1921

(4) 1927

Answer: 3

 Experiments of Truth or Autobiography') is the autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi, covering his life from early childhood through to 1921. It was written in weekly installments and published in his journal Navjivan from 1925 to 1929. Its English translation also appeared in installments in his other journal Young India.

13. In a writing system the minimal unit that can cause a difference of meaning is called

(1) phoneme

(2) grapheme

(3) morpheme

(4) jargon

Answer: 2

 

14. Nnu Ego is a character in

(1) Chinua Achebe’s Anthills of Savannah

(2) Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun

(3) Buchi Emecheta’s The Joys of Motherhood

(4) Ben Okri’s The Famished Road

Answer: 3

 

15. Match the word with definition :

List – I

A. Etymon

B. Code switching

C. Cognate

D. Pragmatics

List – II

I. Changing from one language variety to another in discourse

II. Rules governing the social use of language

III. Etymological source of a word

IV. Words with a common ancestor

Codes :

A B C D

(1) IV I III II

(2) III II IV I

(3) III I IV II

(4) IV I II III

Answer: 3

 

16. What would help a reader recognize Keats’s “To Autumn” as a poem from the Romantic period?

(1) Its logical succession of images

(2) Its concise use of couplets

(3) Its lavish natural imagery

(4) Its use of iambic pentameter

Answer: 3

 

17. Which of the following is an accurate description of ‘heteroglossia’?

(1) Heteroglossia makes the job of the novelist easier by incorporating diversity into the novelistic structure.

(2) Heteroglossia functions in a novel in alliance with its stylistic system incorporating multiple voices inscribed in social language and differentiated components of a writer’s ideological position.

(3) Heteroglossia creates concrete conceptualisations through language in association with the singular view of the artistic effort resulting in the unified world of the novel.

(4) Heteroglossia enters the linguistic universe of the novel to homogenize its multiple differences and voices in a singular vision of accomplished structure.

Answer: 2

 

18. In Ulysses Leopold Bloom works for a Dublin

(1) bar

(2) park

(3) newspaper

(4) bank

Answer: 3

 Bloom is 38 years old, Hungarian Jewish from his father (Rudolf Virag) and Irish Catholic from his mother (Ellen Higgins). He currently works as an ad canvasser for the newspaper The Freeman's Journal, but he's had other odd jobs throughout his life.


19. Which pair of plays belongs to the early career of Harold Pinter?

I. The Caretaker

II. One for the Road

III. Celebration

IV. The Room

The right combination according to the code is

 

(1) I and III

(2) II and III

(3) I and IV

(4) II and IV

Answer: 3

 

20. Who among the following contemporaries of John Donne wrote the following lines on his death : 

“Here lies a king, that ruled as he thought fit/

The universal monarch of wit”?

(1) George Herbert

(2) Henry King

(3) Thomas Carew

(4) Henry Crashaw

Answer: 3

 

21. In his poem “Australia” A.D. Hope says that

I. Australia is “without songs, architecture, history”.

II. “Her five cities are like five dry rivers.”

III. The poet turns to her “to find/The Arabian desert of the human mind/Hoping if still from deserts prophets come.”

IV. “She is the first of lands, the warmest.”

Codes :

(1) I and III

(2) II and III

(3) III and IV

(4) I and IV

Answer: 1

 

22. Basic English, a simplified and fundamental framework of English, was formulated by

I. I.A. Richards

II. Alastair Fowler

III. William Empson

IV. C.K. Ogden

The right combination according to the code is :

(1) I and II

(2) II and III

(3) I and IV

(4) I and III

Answer: 3

 

23. “Britons will never be slaves !” – felt proud Britons in the eighteenth century. A great many Britons, though, had no qualms about owning slaves and profiting from them

Who among the following British authors selfconsciously engaged with the issue of slavery in some poems?

I. Hannah More

II. Mary Collier

III. Anna Seward

IV. Anna Yearsley

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and III

(2) I and IV

(3) II and III

(4) III and IV

Answer: 2

 

24. Match the Novelist with the work :

List – I

A. Anita Desai

B. Nayantara Sahgal

C. Arun Joshi

D. Kamala Markandaya

List – II

I. Rich Like Us

II. The Nowhere Man

III. In Custody

IV. The Last Labyrinth

Codes :

A B C D

(1) III II IV I

(2) III I IV II

(3) II I IV III

(4) III IV I II

Answer: 2

 

25. Identify the right chronological sequence :

(1) The American Pastoral – Sister Carrie – The Great Gatsby – Beloved

(2) The Great Gatsby – Sister Carrie – Beloved – The American Pastoral

(3) Sister Carrie – The Great Gatsby – Beloved – The American Pastoral

(4) Sister Carrie – The Great Gatsby – The American Pastoral – Beloved

Answer: 3

sister carrie is a novel by theodore dreiser about a young woman who moves to the big city where she starts realizing her own american dream. 


26. In which of the following senses did Marx and Engels originally use the term “ideology” in The German Ideology?

(1) Something that mystifies the actual material conditions of society, a sort of false consciousness.

(2) The elaborate structures and institutions that mark the bourgeoise society.

(3) The concepts of base and superstructure that govern the economic relations of the society.

(4) The fundamental class consciousness of the proletariat which leads to their awakening.

Answer: 1

 

27. The plot of this Coetzee novel unravels the narrative of a poor man of colour trying to survive in a civil-war situation, never taking sides. Identify the novel.

(1) Disgrace

(2) Age of Iron

(3) Waiting for the Barbarians

(4) Life and Times of Michael K.

Answer: 4

 

28. Which of the following lines of T.S. Eliot is used by Anita Desai as the epigraph for her novel, Baumgartner’s Bombay?

(1) “I will show you fear in a handful of dust,” The Waste Land

(2) “In my beginning is my end”, “East Coker”

(3) “Human kind cannot bear very much reality”, “Burnt Norton”

(4) “I have measured out my life with coffee spoons,” “Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”

Answer: 2

 East Coker is the second poem of T. S. Eliot's 1943 book Four Quartets.


29. In the General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales which two characters are examples of deep Christian goodness?

I. the Summoner

II. the Parson

III. the Ploughman

IV. the Pardoner

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) II and IV

(3) II and III

(4) I and IV

Answer: 3

 

30. Identify Falstaff’s first words in Henry IV, Part I :

(1) “Now, Harry, what time of day is it, lad?”

(2) “Now, Hal, what time of day is it, lad?”

(3) “Now, Harry, what time of night is it, lad?”

(4) “Now, Hal, what time of night is it, lad?”

Answer: 2

 

31. Anna Barbauld, Laetitia Elizabeth London, Charlotte Smith, Mary Robinson and Felicia Hemans are

(1) first wave feminists

(2) women poets of the Romantic period

(3) Victorian writers of popular fiction

(4) nineteenth century stage artists

Answer: 2

 

32. Ray Bradbury has titled one of his short story collections – Golden Apples of the Sun – after the last line of a W.B. Yeats poem. Which poem?

(1) “The Death of Cuchulain”

(2) “The Peacock”

(3) “The Hour Before Dawn”

(4) “The Song of Wandering Aengus”

Answer: 4

The words "the golden apples of the sun" are from the last line of the final stanza of W. B. Yeats ' poem "The Song of Wandering Aengus" (1899). 
Golden Apples of the Sun by Ray Bradbury is a collection of short stories first published in 1953 with 22 short stories.
last stanza of The Long of Wandering Aengus:
Though I am old with wandering
Through hollow lands and hilly lands,
I will find out where she has gone,
And kiss her lips and take her hands;
And walk among long dappled grass,
And pluck till time and times are done,
The silver apples of the moon,
The golden apples of the sun

33. Which play by Tom Stoppard set in Zurich during the First World War presents a character’s interactions with James Joyce as he was writing Ulysses, Tristran Zara during the rise of Dadaism, and Lenin leading up to the Russian Revolution, all of whom were living in Zurich at that time?

(1) After Magritte

(2) Dirty Linen

(3) Artist Descending a Staircase

(4) Travesties

Answer: 4

Dada (/ˈdɑːdɑː/) or Dadaism was an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century, with early centres in Zürich, Switzerland.

Travesties is a 1974 play by Tom Stoppard. The play centres on the figure of Henry Carr, an elderly man who reminisces about Zürich in 1917 during the First World War, and his interactions with James Joyce when he was writing UlyssesTristan Tzara during the rise of Dada, and Lenin leading up to the Russian Revolution, all of whom were living in Zürich at that time.


34. “Most blameless is he, centered in the sphere 

Of common duties, decent not to fail 

In offices of tenderness…” 

In these lines from “Ulysses”, what does Ulysses suggest about Telemachus?

(1) He shows heroic qualities.

(2) He is patient and selfless.

(3) He is very much like his father.

(4) He may be too tender-hearted to be king.

Answer: 2

 

35. In Restoration comedies the following is true EXCEPT

(1) the London life of hedonistic young men is portrayed.

(2) names encapsulate traits.

(3) unchaste women, widows and cuckolds scarcely make an appearance.

(4) the heroines seek a say in the choice of a marriage partner.

Answer: 3

A Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage is often credited with turning the tide against the sexually explicit nature of Restoration comedy.


36. What happens to the character Boy at the end of Luigi Pirandello’s play Six Characters in Search of an Author?

(1) He drowns in the fountain.

(2) He is shot dead by the Father.

(3) He leaves the stage alone.

(4) He commits suicide.

Answer: 4

 

37. Which of the following adjectives will not apply to Becky Sharp, a major character in Vanity Fair?

(1) ambitious

(2) energetic

(3) wellborn

(4) scheming

Answer: 3

Amelia Sedley, called Emmy, is good-natured but passive and naïve. Not very beautiful, she is frequently ignored by men and women but is well-liked by most men who get to know her because of her personality.

Rebecca Sharp, called Becky, is Amelia's opposite: an intelligent young woman with a gift for satire. She is described as a short sandy haired girl who has green eyes and a great deal of wit. Becky is born to a French opera dancer mother and an art teacher and artist father Francis. Fluent in both French and English, Becky has a beautiful singing voice, plays the piano, and shows great talent as an actress. Without a mother to guide her into marriage, Becky resolves that "I must be my own Mamma"


38. Which character in Anton Chekhov’s play, The Cherry Orchard, first suggests the selling of the orchard?

(1) Trofimov

(2) Yephikodov

(3) Lopakhin

 (4) Varya

Answer: 3

 

39. Identify the correct chronological sequence of the founding of the following 18th century English periodicals :

(1) Tatler – Spectator – The Gentleman’s Magazine – Rambler

(2) Spectator – Tatler – The Gentleman’s Magazine – Rambler

(3) Rambler – Tatler – Spectator – The Gentleman’s Magazine

(4) Tatler – Spectator – Rambler – The Gentleman’s Magazine

Answer: 1

The Gentleman's Magazine was a monthly magazine founded in London, England, by Edward Cave in January 1731. It ran uninterrupted for almost 200 years, until 1922. It was the first to use the term magazine (Cave, who edited The Gentleman's Magazine under the pen name "Sylvanus Urban", was the first to use the termfrom the French magazine, meaning "storehouse") for a periodical. Samuel Johnson's first regular employment as a writer was with The Gentleman's Magazine.
Contributions to the magazine frequently took the form of letters, addressed to "Mr. Urban".

40. Who identified “strangled articulateness” as a theme in Canadian writing?

(1) Margaret Atwood

(2) Northrop Frye

(3) Michael Ondaatjee

(4) Joy Kogawa

Answer: 2

 

41. Identify the gynocritics in the following list :

I. Alice Jardine

II. Elaine Showalter

III. Sandra Gilbert

IV. Kate Millett

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) II and IV

(3) II and III

(4) III and IV

Answer: 3

 

42. Identify the character who is not part of the group of three protagonists in Girish Karnad’s Hayavadana :

(1) Padmini

(2) Gautama

(3) Kapila

(4) Devadatta

Answer: 2

 

43. Aurobindo Ghosh, author of ‘Savitri’, taught for some time at Baroda College after his return from England in 1893. 

Which subject did he teach?

(1) English

(2) French

(3) Sanskrit

(4) Bengali

Answer: 2

He joined the Baroda state service in 1893. He also did jobs like teaching grammar and composing speeches for the Maharaja of Gaekwad. In 1897, he joined the Baroda College as a French teacher. He also taught himself Sanskrit and Bengali during this time.
After some time Sri Aurobindo was, therefore, transferred to the Baroda College, first as a teacher of French, and then as vice-principal, where he was very popular with the students for his unconventional way of teaching.

44. Christopher Marlowe’s Hero and Leander can be classified as a/an

(1) complaint

(2) stichomythia

(3) epyllion

(4) pasturelle

Answer: 3

 Epyllion is short narrative poem 

 Stichomythia  is a technique in verse drama in which sequences of single alternating lines, or half-lines (hemistichomythia) or two-line speeches (distichomythia) are given to alternating characters. It typically features repetition and antithesis. The term originated in the theatre of Ancient Greece, though many dramatists since have used the technique. Etymologically it derives from the Greek stikhos ("row, line of verse") + muthos ("speech, talk"). Stichomythia is particularly well suited to sections of dramatic dialogue where two characters are in violent dispute. 

The pastourelle is a typically Old French lyric form concerning the romance of a shepherdess. In most of the early pastourelles, the poet knight meets a shepherdess who bests him in a battle of wit and who displays general coyness. The narrator usually has sexual relations, either consensual or rape, with the shepherdess, and there is a departure or escape. 


45. Which among the following does not belong to Indo-European language family?

(1) English

(2) German

(3) Scandinavian

(4) Finnish

Answer: 4

 

46. What, among the following, is ruled out by Longinus as a way of achieving the sublime?

(1) great thoughts

(2) immoderate emotion

(3) noble diction

(4) dignified and elevated word arrangement

Answer: 2

 

47. Who among the following is not a beat writer?

(1) Jack Kerouac

(2) Allen Ginsberg

(3) Robert Lowell

(4) William Burroughs

Answer: 3

 

48. This was a masque written by Ben Jonson, staged on Twelfth Night and it was the first masque in which Prince Charles took part.

(1) Masque of Blankness

(2) The Masque of Queens

 (3) Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue

(4) The Gypsies Metamorphed

Answer: 3

 Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue is a Jacobean era masque, written by Ben Jonson and designed by Inigo Jones. It was first performed on Twelfth Night, 6 January 1618, in the Banqueting House at Whitehall Palace. The work's failure on its initial performance, and its subsequent revision, marked a significant development in Jonson's evolving masque technique. The masque marked the début of the young Prince Charles, the future King Charles I, in the public life of the Stuart Court.


49. Elizabeth Bishop’s poems are best remembered for their

(1) conversational intimacy

(2) intellectual tenor

(3) astringent satire

(4) urban topography

Answer: 1

 

50. Which chilling novel of surveillance and entrapment had the alternative title Things as They Are?

(1) Horace Walpole’s Castle of Otranto.

(2) Matthew Gregory Lewis’s The Monk.

(3) Thomas Love Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey.

(4) William Godwin’s Caleb Williams.

Answer: 4

 Castle of Otranto's subtitle A Gothic Story

The subtitle of caleb williams is Things as They Are


51. In “My Last Duchess” which of the following is not one of the Duchess’s is demeanours, according to the Duke?

(1) She was flattered by compliments from Fra Pandolf.

(2) She enjoyed the sunset as much as she enjoyed her husband’s favour.

(3) She wouldn’t listen to her husband when he tried to correct her behaviour.

(4) She was equally grateful for all acts of kindness, regardless of their source.

Answer: 3

 

52. In his essay “From Work to Text” Roland Barthes says the following about the text :

I. The text is singular.

II. The text can be held in the hand.

III. The text is held in language.

IV. The text is a methodological field.

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and III

(2) II and IV

(3) III and IV

(4) III and II

Answer: 3

 

53. Seamus Heaney’s “Digging” in his first volume of poetry, Death of a Naturalist, illustrates all the following EXCEPT

(1) his preoccupation with his roots

(2) his obsession with Irish legend and folklore

(3) his respect for the natural world of the farming community and the labour of his ancestors

(4) his displaced vocation of digging with a pen

Answer: 2

 Death of a Naturalist is first poetry collection by Noble winner Seamus Heaney. ‘Death of a Naturalist’ shows a child’s fascination of the countryside, followed by a sharp shock when he senses the dark side of nature.


54. Here is a list of Indian writers who have translated their work into English. Match the writer with his source language :

List – I

A. O.V. Vijayan

B. Vilas Sarang

C. Krishna Baldev Vaid

D. Girish Karnad

List – II

I. Kannada

II. Malayalam

III. Marathi

IV. Hindi

Codes :

A B C D

(1) II IV III I

(2) I III IV II

(3) II III IV I

(4) II III I IV

Answer: 3

 

55. In Book 8, Paradise Lost Adam identifies his chief flaw or weakness to Raphael. What is this flaw?

(1) gluttony

(2) pride in his superiority to Eve

(3) overconfidence in his free will

(4) passion for Eve

Answer: 4

 

56. Identify the correct chronological sequence of the following early English texts :

(1) Troilus and Criseyde – The Owl and The Nightingale – Utopia – Morte d’Arthur

(2) Troilus and Criseyde – Utopia – Morte d’Arthur – The Owl and the Nightingale

(3) The Owl and the Nightingale – Troilus and Criseyde – Morte d’Arthur – Utopia

(4) The Owl and the Nightingale – Morte d’Arthur – Troilus and Criseyde – Uttopia

Answer: 3

 

57. In Sophocles’s play King Oedipus Laius, the erstwhile ruler of Thebes, was murdered

(1) at the edge of the forest on his way to Delphi

(2) at the edge of the forest as he returned from Delphi

(3) at the crossroads as he returned from Delphi

(4) at the crossroads on his way to Delphi

Answer: 4

 

58. The quintessentially metafictional novel, If On a Winter’s Night a Traveller by Italo Calvino has alternate chapters with chapter numbers and titles. Which of the following are the titles of the chapters in the novel?

I. Looks Down in the Gathering Shadow

II. In a Network of Lines that Enlace

III. In a Network of Lines that Interface

IV. What Story there Awaits its End?

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) I and IV

(3) III and IV

(4) II and IV

Answer: 1

 

59. The novel Maurice by E.M. Forster appeared posthumously in 1971. It had a homosexual theme, so Forster considered its subject matter too indelicate for publication during his life time. 

It was influenced by a writer who was a socialist and open homosexual. Identify the writer.

(1) Oscar Wilde

(2) Edward Carpenter

(3) W.H. Auden

(4) E.F. Benson

Answer: 2

 

60. Who among the following has elaborated on the “Indianisation” of English?

(1) L.M. Khubchandani

(2) B. Kumaravadivelu

(3) B.Braj Kachru

(4) Rajendra Singh

Answer: 3

 

61. These are four models of relating literature to history. Which of the following is associated with formalism?

(1) Literary texts are universal and transcend history : the historical context of their production and reception has no bearing on the literary work which is aesthetically autonomous, having its own laws, being a world into itself.

(2) The historical context of a literary work is integral to a proper understanding of it : the text is produced within a specific historical context but in its literariness it remains separate from that context.

(3) Literary works can help us to understand the time in which they are set : realist texts in particular provide imaginative representations of specific historical moments, events or periods.

(4) Literary texts are bound up with other discourses and rhetorical structures : they are part of a history that is still in the process of being written.

Answer: 1

 

62. As Gunter Grass’s novel The Tin Drum opens we find Oskar Matzerath

(1) on the war front entertaining the soldiers as part of a band of dwarfs.

(2) in a mental hospital writing his story.

(3) admitted in a hospital after his fatal fall in the wine cellar.

(4) watching a ball in which the young ladies ignore his presence.

Answer: 2

 

63. D.H. Lawrence’s 1926 novel The Plumed Serpent is set in which country?

(1) Egypt

(2) South Africa

(3) Mexico

(4) Peru

Answer: 3

 

64. Which two writers can be described as writing historical novels?

I. Sir Walter Scott

II. Charlotte Bronte

III. Maria Edgeworth

IV. Jane Austen

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) II and III

(3) I and III

(4) III and IV

Answer: 3

 

65. Which of Kazuo Ishiguro’s novels are set mostly in Japan?

I. The Unconsoled

II. The Remains of the Day

III. An Artist of the Floating World

IV. A Pale View of Hills

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and III

(2) II and III

(3) III and IV

(4) I and IV

Answer: 3

 

66. In The Advancement of Learning Bacon noted the need for more studies of

I. moral knowledge

II. forbidden knowledge

III. civil knowledge

IV. spiritual knowledge

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and III

(2) I and IV

(3) II and III

(4) II and IV

Answer: 1

 

67. Which among the following texts purports to be the autobiography of a mad German philosopher edited by an equally fictitious editor?

(1) Sartos Resartus

(2) The Dream of Gerontius

(3) The Professor

(4) Felix Holf

Answer: 1

Sartor Restarus is the biography of the German philosopher Diogenes Teufelsdröckh by Thomas Carlyle. The novel first came out as a serial between 1833 to 1834. It was then fully published in 1836 as a novel. 
The novel is a commentary on the thoughts of the philosopher Diogenes Teufelsdröckh. 
Subtitled The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdröckh (“Mr. Devil’s Dung”)

68. As Sidney argues in "A Defence of Poesy" which discipline is more useful and praiseworthy – history or poetry?

(1) History “being captivated to truth” is more useful than poetry.

(2) Poetry where man can see “virtue exalted and vice punished” is more useful than history.

(3) History is more useful for poetry is “an encouragement to unbridled wickedness”.

(4) History and poetry are synonymous, and so both are useful.

Answer: 2

 

69. In Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress Christian and his friend faithful cause a commotion at the Vanity Fair for many reasons. 

Which of the following statements is not true of their appearance at the fair?

(1) They are dressed differently than the other fair-goers.

(2) They speak the language of the Bible at the fair.

(3) They sample every entertainment at the fair.

(4) They refuse to look at the merchandise at the fair.

Answer: 3

 

70. What does the title Morte d’Arthur mean?

(1) Arthur mortified

(2) Death of Arthur

(3) Castle of Arthur

(4) Burial of Arthur

Answer: 2

 

71. Assertion (A) : Characters in novels are people whose secret lives are visible or might be visible. We are people whose secret lives are invisible.

Reason (R) : Even when novels are about wicked people, they can solace us; they suggest a more manageable human race, they give us the illusion of seeing clearly and of power. 

In the light of the statements above

(1) Both (A) and (R) are correct and (R) is the correct explanation of (A).

(2) Both (A) and (R) are correct but (R) is not the correct explanation of (A).

(3) (A) is right, but (R) is wrong.

(4) (A) is wrong, but (R) is right.

Answer: 1

 

Read the following poem and answer the questions, 72 to 75 :

                Dead Fox

We pretended to know nothing about it.

I withdrew to my childhood training: stay out

of swampy undergrowth, choked edges.

This was around the time

we were too cruel to kill the mice we caught,

leaving them in the Have-a-Heart trap

under the sun-burning bramble of rugosa.

But moving up the trail, we caught a glimpse

right at the start: the fox just over the hillock

on the dune-side slope, spoiling

the grass-inscribed sand. Neither of us looked –

it seemed best to back away.

On the dune’s steep side

we surveyed what we’d come for : ocean’s

snaking blue beyond the meadow, the silvered

blade-like wands lying down. Lovely enough

to hold ourselves to that view.

But the currents of an odor wafted in and out,

until the sweep of smell grew wider, wilder.

The heat compounded, and ugliness

settled its cloud over us, profound as human speech,

although by then we were not speaking.

 

72. The “We” of the opening line indicates

(1) a group

(2) two persons

(3) the speaker and an imaginary listener

(4) an unspecified crowd

Answer: 2

 

73. The dead animal was sighted

(1) at the end of the trail

(2) on the dune’s steep side

(3) on the dune’s sloping side

(4) in the swampy undergrowth

Answer: 3

 

74. The reaction evoked in response to a glimpse of the dead fox is best described as

I. evasive

II. angry

III. bizarre

IV. muted

The right combination according to the code is

(1) I and II

(2) II and III

(3) I and IV

(4) III and IV

Answer: 3

 

75. At the close of the poem, which of the following senses overpowers and renders the visitors speechless?

(1) sight

(2) touch

(3) sound

(4) smell

Answer: 4

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