लोगों की राय

बी ए - एम ए >> बीए सेमेस्टर-5 पेपर-1 अंग्रेजी

बीए सेमेस्टर-5 पेपर-1 अंग्रेजी

सरल प्रश्नोत्तर समूह

प्रकाशक : सरल प्रश्नोत्तर सीरीज प्रकाशित वर्ष : 2023
पृष्ठ :200
मुखपृष्ठ : पेपरबैक
पुस्तक क्रमांक : 2780
आईएसबीएन :0

Like this Hindi book 0

5 पाठक हैं

बीए सेमेस्टर-5 पेपर-1 अंग्रेजी - सरल प्रश्नोत्तर

Question- Attempt a critical appreciation of sophocles Oedipus rex.

Answer-

Analysis of Sophocles' Oedipus Rex

The place of the Oedipus Tyrannus in literature is something like that of the Mona Lisa in art. Everyone knows the story, the first detective story of Western literature; everyone who has read or seen it is drawn into its enigmas and moral dilemmas. It presents a kind of nightmare vision of a world suddenly turned upside down: a decent man discovers that he has unknowingly killed his father, married his mother, and sired children by her. It is a story that, as Aristotle says in the Poetics, makes one shudder with horror and feel pity just on hearing it. In Sophocles' hands, however, this ancient tale becomes a profound meditation on the questions of guilt and responsibility, the order (or disorder) of our world, and the nature of man. The play stands with the Book of Job, Hamlet, and King Lear as one of Western literature's most searching examinations of the problem of suffering.

-Charles Segal, Oedipus Tyrannus: Tragic Heroism and the Limits of Knowledge

No other drama has exerted a longer or stronger hold on the imagination than Sophocles' Oedipus the King (also known as Oedipus Tyrannus or Oedipus Rex). Tragic drama that is centered on the dilemma of a single central character largely begins with Sophocles and is exemplified by his Oedipus, arguably the most influential play ever written. The most famous of all Greek dramas, Sophocles' play, supported by Aristotle in the Poetics, set the standard by which tragedy has been measured for nearly two-and-a-half millennia. For Aristotle, Sophocles' play featured the ideal tragic hero in Oedipus, a man of "great repute and good fortune," whose fall, coming from his horrifying discovery that he has killed his father and married his mother, is masterfully arranged to elicit tragedy's proper cathartic mixture of pity and terror. The play's relentless exploration of human nature, destiny, and suffering turns an ancient tale of a man's shocking history into one of the core human myths. Oedipus thereby joins a select group of fictional characters, including Odysseus, Faust, Don Juan, and Don Quixote, that have entered our collective consciousness as paradigms of humanity and the human condition. As classical scholar Bernard Knox has argued, "Sophocles' Oedipus is not only the greatest creation of a major poet and the classic representative figure of his age: he is also one of a long series of tragic protagonists who stand as symbols of human aspiration and despair before the characteristic dilemma of Western civilization-the problem of man's true stature, his proper place in the universe."

For nearly 2,500 years Sophocles' play has claimed consideration as drama's most perfect and most profound achievement. Julius Caesar wrote an adaptation; Nero allegedly acted the part of the blind Oedipus. First staged in a European theater in 1585, Oedipus has been continually performed ever since and reworked by such dramatists as Pierre Corneille, John Dryden, Voltaire, William Butler Yeats, André Gide, and Jean Cocteau. The French neoclassical tragedian Jean Racine asserted that Oedipus was the ideal tragedy, while D. H. Lawrence regarded it as "the finest drama of all time." Sigmund Freud discovered in the play the key to understanding man's deepest and most repressed sexual and aggressive impulses, and the so-called Oedipus complex became one of the founding myths of psychoanalysis. Oedipus has served as a crucial mirror by which each subsequent era has been able to see its own reflection and its understanding of the mystery of human existence. If Aeschylus is most often seen as the great originator of ancient Greek tragedy and Euripides is viewed as the great outsider and iconoclast, it is Sophocles who occupies the central position as classical tragedy's technical master and the age's representative figure over a lifetime that coincided with the rise and fall of Athens's greatness as a political and cultural power in the fifth century b.c. Sophocles was born in 496 near Athens in Colonus, the legendary final resting place of the exiled Oedipus. At the age of 16, Sophocles, an accomplished dancer and lyre player, was selected to lead the celebration of the victory over the Persians at the battle of Salamis, the event that ushered in Athens's golden age. He died in 406, two years before Athens's fall to Sparta, which ended nearly a century of Athenian supremacy and cultural achievement. Very much at the center of Athenian public life, Sophocles served as a treasurer of state and a diplomat and was twice elected as a general. A lay priest in the cult of a local deity, Sophocles also founded a literary association and was an intimate of such prominent men of letters as Ion of Chios, Herodotus, and Archelaus. Urbane, garrulous, and witty, Sophocles was remembered fondly by his contemporaries as possessing all the admired qualities of balance and tranquillity. Nicknamed "the Bee" for his "honeyed" style of fl owing eloquence-the highest compliment the Greeks could bestow on a poet or speaker-Sophocles was regarded as the tragic Homer.

In marked contrast to his secure and stable public role and private life, Sophocles' plays orchestrate a disturbing challenge to assurance and certainty by pitting vulnerable and fallible humanity against the inexorable forces of nature and destiny. Sophocles began his career as a playwright in 468 b.c. with a first-prize victory over Aeschylus in the Great, or City, Dionysia, the annual Athenian drama competition. Over the next 60 years he produced more than 120 plays (only seven have survived intact), winning first prize at the Dionysia 24 times and never earning less than second place, making him unquestionably the most successful and popular playwright of his time. It is Sophocles who introduced the third speaking actor to classical drama, creating the more complex dramatic situations and deepened psychological penetration through interpersonal relationships and dialogue. "Sophocles turned tragedy inward upon the principal actors," classicist Richard Lattimore has observed, "and drama becomes drama of character." Favoring dramatic action over narration, Sophocles brought offstage action onto the stage, emphasized dialogue rather than lengthy, undramatic monologues, and purportedly. introduced painted scenery. Also of note, Sophocles replaced the connected trilogies of Aeschylus with self-contained plays on different subjects at the same contest, establishing the norm that has continued in Western drama with its emphasis on the intensity and unity of dramatic action. At their core, Sophocles' tragedies are essentially moral and religious dramas pitting the tragic hero against unalterable fate as defined by universal laws, particular circumstances, and individual temperament. By testing his characters so severely, Sophocles orchestrated adversity into revelations that continue to evoke an audience's capacity for wonder and compassion.

The story of Oedipus was part of a Theban cycle of legends that was second only to the stories surrounding the Trojan War as a popular subject for Greek literary treatment. Thirteen different Greek dramatists, including Aeschylus and Euripides, are known to have' written plays on the subject of Oedipus and his progeny. Sophocles' great innovation was to turn Oedipus's horrifying circumstances into a drama of self-discovery that probes the mystery of selfhood and human destiny.

The play opens with Oedipus secure and respected as the capable ruler of Thebes having solved the riddle of the Sphinx and gained the throne and Thebes's widowed queen, Jocasta; as his reward. Plague now besets the city, and Oedipus comes to Thebes's rescue once again when, after learning from the oracle of Apollo that the plague is a punishment for the murder of his predecessor, Laius, he swears to discover and bring the murderer to justice. The play, therefore, begins as a detective story, with the key question "Who killed Laius?" as the initial mystery. Oedipus initiates the first in a seemingly inexhaustible series of dramatic ironies as the detective who turns out to be his own quarry. Oedipus's judgment of banishment for Laius's murderer seals his own fate. Pledged to restore Thebes to health, Oedipus is in fact the source of its affliction. Oedipus's success in discovering Laius's murderer will be his own undoing, and the seemingly percipient, riddle solving Oedipus will only. see the truth about himself when he is blind. To underscore this point, the blind seer Teiresias is summoned. He is reluctant to tell what he knows, but Oedipus is adamant: "No man, no place, nothing will escape my gaze. / I will not stop until I know it all." Finally goaded by Oedipus to reveal that Oedipus himself is "the killer you're searching for" and the plague that afflicts Thebes, Teiresias introduces the play's second mystery, "Who is Oedipus?"

You have eyes to see with,
But you do not see yourself, you do not see
The horror shadowing every step of your life,
... Who are your father and mother? Can you tell me?

Oedipus rejects Teiresias's horrifying answer to this question-that Oedipus has killed his own father and has become a "sower of seed where your father has sowed"-as part of a conspiracy with Jocasta's brother Creon against his rule. In his treatment of Teiresias and his subsequent condemning of Creon to death, Oedipus exposes his pride, wrath, and rush to judgment, character flaws that alloy his evident strengths of relentless determination to learn the truth and fortitude in bearing the consequences. Jocasta comes to her brother's defense, while arguing that not all oracles can be believed. By relating the circumstances of Laius's death, Jocasta attempts to demonstrate that Oedipus could not be the murderer while ironically providing Oedipus with the details that help to prove the case of his culpability. In what is a marvel of ironic plot construction, each step forward in answering the questions surrounding the murder and Oedipus's parentage takes Oedipus a step back in time toward full disclosure and self-discovery.

As Oedipus is made to shift from self-righteous authority to doubt, a messenger from Corinth arrives with news that Oedipus's supposed father, Poly-bus, is dead. This intelligence seems again to disprove the oracle that Oedipus is fated to kill his father. Oedipus, however, still is reluctant to return home for fear that he could still marry his mother. To relieve Oedipus's anxiety, the messenger reveals that he himself brought Oedipus as an infant to Polybus. Like Jocasta whose evidence in support of Oedipus's innocence turns into confirmation of his guilt, the messenger provides intelligence that will connect Oedipus to both Laius and Jocasta as their son and as his father's killer. The messenger's intelligence produces the crucial recognition for Jocasta, who urges Oedipus to cease any further inquiry. Oedipus, however, persists, summoning the herdsman who gave the infant to the messenger and was coincidentally the sole survivor of the attack on Laius. The herdsman's eventual confirmation of both the facts of Oedipus's birth and Laius's murder produces the play's staggering climax. Aristotle would cite Sophocles' simultaneous con-junction of Oedipus's recognition of his identity and guilt with his reversal of fortune condemned by his own words to banishment and exile as Laius's murderer-as the ideal artful arrangement of a drama's plot to produce the desired cathartic pity and terror.

The play concludes with an emphasis on what Oedipus will now do after he knows the truth. No tragic hero has fallen further or faster than in the real time of Sophocles' drama in which the time elapsed in the play coincides with the performance time. Oedipus is stripped of every illusion of his authority, control, righteousness, and past wisdom and is forced to contend with a shame that is impossible to expiate-patricide and incestual relations with his mother-in a world lacking either justice or alleviation from suffering. Oedipus's heroic grandeur, however, grows in his diminishment. Fundamentally a victim of circumstances, innocent of intentional sin whose fate was preordained before his birth, Oedipus refuses the consolation of blamelessness that victimization confers, accepting in full his guilt and self- imposed sentence as an outcast, criminal, and sinner. He blinds himself to confirm the moral shame that his actions, unwittingly or not, have provoked. It is Oedipus's capacity to endure the revelation of his sin, his nature, and his fate that dominates the play's conclusion. Oedipus's greatest strengths-his determination to know the truth and to accept what he learns-sets him apart as one of the most pitiable and admired of tragic heroes. "The closing note of the tragedy," Knox argues, "is a renewed insistence on the heroic nature of Oedipus; the play ends as it began, with the greatness of the hero. But it is a different kind of greatness. It is now based on knowledge, not, as before on ignorance." The now-blinded Oedipus has been forced to see and experience the impermanence of good fortune, the reality of unimaginable moral shame, and a cosmic order that is either perverse in its calculated cruelty or chaotically random in its designs, in either case defeating any human need for justice and mercy.

The Chorus summarizes the harsh lesson of heroic defeat that the play so majestically dramatizes-

Look and learn all citizens of Thebes. This is Oedipus.
He, who read the famous riddle, and we hailed chief of men,
All envied his power, glory, and good fortune.
Now upon his head the sea of disaster crashes down.
Mortality is man's burden. Keep your eyes fixed on your last day.
Call no man happy until he reaches it, and finds rest from suffering.

Few plays have dealt so unflinchingly with existential truths or have as bravely defined human heroism in the capacity to see, suffer, and endure.

...Prev | Next...

<< पिछला पृष्ठ प्रथम पृष्ठ अगला पृष्ठ >>

    अनुक्रम

  1. Question- What is an Epic? Describe its main characteristics.
  2. Question- Write a short note on kinds of epic.
  3. Question- Write a short note on Mock-Epic.
  4. Question- Point out the chief characteristics of epic.
  5. Question- Explain Birth of tragedy written by Nietzsche. Summarize. The Birth of Tragedy by Nictzche.
  6. Question- Explain the comedy in Classical literature.
  7. Question- Explain the early history of the Athens City State.
  8. Question- Discuss the literary trends of the Augustan Age or Augustan Rome.
  9. Question- Write a short note on epic.
  10. Question- What is mock-epic?
  11. Question- What is an Epic?
  12. Question- According to Nietzsche, what does the tragedy of Oedipus teach us about knowledge?
  13. Question- What separates the Dionysian Greek from the Dionysian barbarian?.
  14. Question- What is comedy?
  15. Question- Why was the reign of Augustus known as the Golden Age of Roman literature?
  16. Question- Why was Roman literature important?
  17. Question- Discuss the themes of the Republic (book VII) Written by Plato.
  18. Question- "Why does Plato compare ordinary human existence to that of chained prisoners in a cave?"
  19. Question- Critically Analysis of the book VII of Republic.
  20. Question- What is an Allegory?
  21. Question- What is the Allegory of the Cave?
  22. Question- What Does The Allegory of the Cave Mean? What is the influence of allegory of the cave?
  23. Question- What is the main theme of Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" in the Republic?
  24. Question- In what sense is the Liberator a philosopher like Socrates?
  25. Question- Attempt an essay on the role and function of the divine machinery employed in Homer epic, The Iliad.
  26. Question- Examine the significance of the wrath of Achilles in Homer's The Iliad.
  27. Question- Comment on The Iliad as an epic.
  28. Question- Discuss Homer s portrayal of Agamemnon in Book I of The Iliad.
  29. Question- How do the first few lines of The Iliad preview the conflict, setting, and characters of the poem?
  30. Question- In what ways, are Achilless and Agamemnons characterizations of each other in Book 1 of The Iliadjustified?
  31. Question- To extent can the dictum character is destiny be applied to oedipus rex.
  32. Question- Discuss the role of Fate in Sophocles's Oedipus Rex.
  33. Question- Attempt a critical appreciation of sophocles Oedipus rex.
  34. Question- Attempt a critical appreciation of the plot structure of Sophocles Oedipus Rex.
  35. Question- What disaster does befall the city of Athens? What safety is expected by the priest?
  36. Question- What does Oedipus declare about the murderer of Laius?
  37. Question- Why does Oedipus want to meet the survivor?
  38. Question- What account of his past life Oedipus did give to Jocasta?
  39. Question- What is the reaction of Jocasta on hearing the truth?
  40. Question- What is the result of discovering the parentage of Oedipus?
  41. Question- Critically examine Geoffrey Chaucer both as a Medieval and a modern poet.
  42. Question- Discuss the literary features and general chacharactersitics of Chaucer age.
  43. Question- Comment on the use of wit, irony and satire in Chaucer's the Prologue.
  44. Question- What is Rhyme Royal? Comment on its use by Chaucer.
  45. Question- Who were the main writers that influenced the Age of Chaucer?
  46. Question- What are literary and intellectual tendencies during the age of Chaucer?
  47. Question- What do you understand by the term 'Renaissance'? Discuss its impact of English Literature.
  48. Question- Write an essay on the characteristics of the Renaissance.
  49. Question- What was the influence of the Renaissance upon the Elizabethan Poetry?
  50. Question- Write an essay on the influence of the Renaissance upon Elizabethan Drama.
  51. Question- Write a note on the English Chaucerians and Scottish ChauceriAnswer-
  52. Question- "Renaissance is the age of discoveries and adventures." Discuss in short."
  53. Question- Write à short note on Renaissance as the age of peace, stability and contentment.
  54. Question- "The Renaissance was both a revolt and a revival." Discuss in short.
  55. Question- "Chaucer is called the Morning Star of the Renaissance." Discuss.
  56. Question- Write a short note on Humanism in the Renaissance.
  57. Question- Write a short note on the feelings of Nationalism and Patriotism in the Renaissance.
  58. Question- Write a short note on humanism in English literature during the Renaissance period.
  59. Question- Write a note on the Reformation and its impact on literature.
  60. Question- Describe the chief characteristics of the Reformation.
  61. Question- Write a note on the prose and drama of the Reformation Period.
  62. Question- "The Reformation is a Revolt." Discuss in short.
  63. Question- Whom do you say the product of the Reformation?
  64. Question- Mention the impact of the Reformation on poetry.
  65. Question- Mention briefly the contribution of the Reformation in the field of literature.
  66. Question- "William Tindale is the translator of the scriptures." Discuss.
  67. Question- What is Cambridge Movement?
  68. Question- What is the difference between "Renaissance and Reformation?
  69. Question- What do you understand by the Morality Play? What are its chief characteristics?
  70. Question- Write an essay on versus Pre-reformation Post-reformation in reference of Morality Plays.
  71. Question- Write a note on Shakespeare's use of the popular belief of his time in Macbeth, and discuss in what ways they help in the tragic development of the action in the play.
  72. Question- Write a note on the Miracle Play.
  73. Question- Distinguish between the classical.comedy and the Shakespearean tragedy.
  74. Question- What is 'tragic flaw' ? Do you find it in Macbeth's character? Illustrate.
  75. Question- "In Shakespeare's comedies heroines take the lead." Analyse.
  76. Question- Mention briefly the theme of the Morality Plays.
  77. Question- What is the role of the virtues in Morality play?
  78. Question- Write a note on Justice and Equity as characters in early English Dramas.
  79. Question- Mention briefly the Miracle Plays as fore-runners of the Shakespearean Drama.
  80. Question- Mention briefly the influence of Latin comedy on Saints Plays and Morality Plays.
  81. Question- What is the difference between miracle and morality plays?
  82. Question- Write a note on the University Wits and their contribution in the field of English Literature.
  83. Question- "The second period of the Elizabethan drama was dominated by "The University Wits". Discuss.
  84. Question- Mention the common features of the plays of the University Wits.
  85. Question- What was the impact of the University Wits on Shakespeare?
  86. Question- "Marlowe gave life and reality to the characters." Discuss.
  87. Question- Write a short note on Marlowe and his works.
  88. Question- Write a short note on Thomas Kyd and John Lyly and their works.
  89. Question- Write an essay on the Elizabethan Poetry.
  90. Question- Write a note on the English Satire.
  91. Question- Write a note on the 'English Ballad'.
  92. Question- Write a short note on sonneteering during the Elizabethan Age.
  93. Question- "Edmund Spenser is the second father of English Poetry." Discuss.
  94. Question- Mention briefly Shakespeare as a sonneteer or as a poet.
  95. Question- Write a note on the prominent works of Spenser.
  96. Question- What do you understand by Metaphysical Poetry and how is it originated?
  97. Question- Evaluate John Donne as the leader and founder of the 'Metaphysical School of Poetry'.
  98. Question- Discuss the main characteristics of Metaphysical poetry.
  99. Question- Write a short note on the obscurity in Metaphysical Poetry.
  100. Question- Write a short note on mysticism in Metaphysical Poetry.
  101. Question- Write a short note on the Metaphysical Poetry as 'show of learning' or 'intellectual poetry'.
  102. Question- Write a note on George Herbert as the Metaphysical Poet.
  103. Question- "Abraham Cowley was the greatest English poet of his time." Discuss
  104. Question- Mention briefly the poets who wrote amatory verse.
  105. Question- Write a short note on the use of conceits and far-fetched images in Metaphysical Poetry.
  106. Question- Mention briefly the Hyperbolic Expressions in Metaphysical Poetry.
  107. Question- Discuss briefly the obscurity in the Metaphysical poetry.
  108. Question- Write a note on Neo-classicism.
  109. Question- Write an essay on the origin and growth of the Neo-classicism.
  110. Question- "Neo-classicism is a mis-leading idea." Discuss.-
  111. Question- Write a note on Dryden and Pope as the chief precursors of Neo-classicism.
  112. Question- Write an essay on the origin and growth of the neo-classicism in English Literature.
  113. Question- What is Classic?
  114. Question- Write a short note on the Classical art, Neo-classical art and Romantic art.
  115. Question- Write a short note on the intellectual in Classical Poetry.
  116. Question- Write a note on the chief precursors of Neo-classicism.
  117. Question- "The classical poetry is almost entirely unromantic." Discuss in short.
  118. Question- "Classical poetry is a 'town poetry'." Discuss in short.
  119. Question- What is an Ode?
  120. Question- Write a note on the artificiality of the classical poets.
  121. Question- Write a note on the pioneers of the Classical School of Poetry.
  122. Question- Write an essay on the growth of the Novel.
  123. Question- What are the chief characteristics of the Novel?
  124. Question- Write a note on contribution of Dr. Samuel Johnson to the eighteenth century literature.
  125. Question- Define novel and discuss the difference between a novel and romance in short.
  126. Question- Discuss briefly the novel as an epic of democracy.
  127. Question- Write some names of prose writers of the Eighteenth Century.
  128. Question- Introduce Charles Dickens as a novelist ?
  129. Question- Who was the founder of the eighteenth century journal "The Spectator'? What was chiefly the theme of his essays?
  130. Question- How did the increase in women readers contribute to the popularity of the novel in the eighteenth century?
  131. Question- How is the popularity of the novel in the age of Johnson related to the rise in power of the middle class?
  132. Question- What were the causes of the growth of the novel in the 18th century?
  133. Question- What is Romanticism? Discuss its main characteristics.
  134. Question- "Wordsworth may rightly be called the pioneer of the Romantic Movement of the early nineteenth century.' Discuss.
  135. Question- Write a note on Shelley's poetry.
  136. Question- Comment on Gray and Collins as Precursors of Romanticism?
  137. Question- Which poets may be called the precursors of the Romantic Movement?
  138. Question- When did Romantic Movement began?
  139. Question- Why is Romantic Movement referred to as Romantic Revival?
  140. Question- Critically examine the contribution of Dr. Samuel Johnson to the eighteenth century literature.
  141. Question- What is Lord Byron's contribution to the Romantic Revival?
  142. Question- Why is Romantic Movement also known as Romantic Revolt?
  143. Question- Mention briefly the element of love of nature found in Romantic Poetry.
  144. Question- What were the qualities of the Romanticism of the Elizabethan Age?
  145. Question- What was the impact of the French Revolution on Romanticism?
  146. Question- Mention briefly the expression of the individualism in Romantic Poetry.
  147. Question- Which movement of English literature was influenced by the French Revolution?
  148. Question- Write an essay on the use of the Poetic Imagery by the Romantic Poets.
  149. Question- Write a note on prose, novel, drama and miscellaneous writings of the Romantic Age.
  150. Question- What do you understand by Romantic Revival? Discuss with examples from the poetry of the period.
  151. Question- What was Wordsworth's contribution to the Romantic Literature?
  152. Question- Write an essay on the novelists of the Romantic age.
  153. Question- Write a note on Edmund Burke's secret of greatness as a prose-writer.
  154. Question- Mention the role of imagination and emotion in the Romantic Literature.
  155. Question- "The Romantic poets obeyed an inner call to explore more fully the world of the spirit." Discuss.
  156. Question- What is Lord B is Lord Byron's contribution to the Romantic Literature?
  157. Question- Write a short note on Wordsworth as a poet of man.
  158. Question- Which form of poetry was most favoured by Keats? Mention some of his poems in this form.
  159. Question- Who was inspired by Rousseau's call "Return to Nature"?
  160. Question- Write a note on the sonnets written in the age of the Romantic Revival.
  161. Question- Discuss the 'Interest in the Past' which is to be seen in Romantic Poetry.
  162. Question- Write a note on the growth of Victorian Literature.
  163. Question- "Alfred Lord Tennyson was the true representative of the Victorian Age." Discuss.
  164. Question- Compare and Contrast Tennyson and Browning as poet?
  165. Question- What is lyrical about Tennyson?
  166. Question- Mention briefly the difference between the Victorian and the Modern Age.
  167. Question- Mention briefly the impact of the Middle Ages on the Victorian poets.
  168. Question- Write a short note on the kinds of novels produced during the Victorian Period and the prominent novelists of the period.
  169. Question- Mention briefly the chief novels of Charles Dickens.
  170. Question- Who are the minor and the main poets of the Victorian Period?
  171. Question- Mention briefly the chief features of Victorian Poetry.
  172. Question- Write a note on the impact of Science and Religion.
  173. Question- Write an essay on the Pre-Raphaelite Movement.
  174. Question- Write an essay on the hief characteristics of the Pre-Raphaelite Poetry.
  175. Question- Mention briefly the chief characteristics of literature in Pre- Raphaelitism.
  176. Question- Give some features of the Pre-Raphaelite Movement.
  177. Question- "Rossetti was the leader of the Pre-Raphaelite Movement." Discuss in short.
  178. Question- "William Morris was a writer, artist and reformer." Discuss in short.
  179. Question- Mention briefly Swinburne as one of the Pre-Raphaelites.
  180. Question- Who were Pre-Raphaelites ?
  181. Question- "The revolt of the nineties looks confused, but not so 'naughty'." Discuss.
  182. Question- Write a note on the literary tendencies of the Naughty Nineties.
  183. Question- Write a note on the pessimistic poets of the Nineties.
  184. Question- Write a note on the novelists of the Nineties.
  185. Question- Write a note on the drama of the Nineties.
  186. Question- What do you understand by "The Decadents'?
  187. Question- Write an essay on the Twentieth Century Poetry.
  188. Question- What do you understand by Georgian Poetry ? Mention the characteristics of imagism and symbolism of Georgian Poetry.
  189. Question- Write an essay on the Twentieth Century Novel.
  190. Question- Write an essay on the Psychological Novel.
  191. Question- Write an essay on the 'Stream of Consciousness novel'.
  192. Question- “The modern novel is a story without an ending.” Discuss.
  193. Question- Write a note on the possibilities and the limitations of the Psychological Novel.
  194. Question- What impression of James Joyce as a Psychological Novelist do you have?
  195. Question- Write a note on the 'Stream of Consciousness' technique in Fiction.
  196. Question- Write a note on the decay of the Plot.
  197. Question- Write an essay on the Twentieth Century Drama.
  198. Question- Write an essay on the chief characteristics of the twentieth century drama.
  199. Question- Write an analytical essay on melodrama.
  200. Question- Write an essay on the poetry between the World-Wars?
  201. Question- Write a note on the contribution of Galsworthy to Modern Drama.
  202. Question- Why are the problem plays known as the drama of ideas or propaganda plays?
  203. Question- Mention the chief qualities of the Modern Poetic Drama.
  204. Question- Mention briefly T.S. Eliot's contribution to the Modern Poetic Drama.
  205. Question- Write a short note on the problem play and its chief qualities.
  206. Question- What are the main characteristics of the Modern Age ?
  207. Question- Mention briefly the impact of the two World Wars on the Modern Literature.
  208. Question- Mention briefly the influence of radio and cinema on the literature of the Modern Age.
  209. Question- What is expressionist drama in Modern Sense ?
  210. Question- What is the Drama of Ideas and what are its chief features ?
  211. Question- Mention briefly the characters of the Drama of Ideas.
  212. Question- Evaluate A.W. Pinero as the playwright of Drama of Ideas.
  213. Question- Write some names of prose writers of the eighteenth century.
  214. Question- Write a note on themes and motives of the dramatists of the Drama of Ideas.
  215. Question- Mention in short the main characteristics of the "Drama of Ideas".
  216. Question- Write a note on Epic Theatre.
  217. Question- Write a note on the technique of 'Alienation Effect'.
  218. Question- What is the goal of Epic Theatre ?
  219. Question- What is the important requirement of acting in Epic Theatre?
  220. Question- Mention briefly the Dialectical Theatre.
  221. Question- Write a note on Feminism.
  222. Question- Write a short note on the three phases of the feminist theory.
  223. Question- What is Post-colonial theory?

अन्य पुस्तकें

लोगों की राय

No reviews for this book