L.?Mencken?as? quot;the?true?father?of?our?national?literature. quot;( ) |
A:ErnestHemingway B:EdgarAllanPoe C:WashingtonIrving D:MarkTwain |
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bsp;___ as a cultural heritage exerted great influence over American moral values and literature. ( ) |
A:democracy B:ideal C:Puritanism D:Romanticism |
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eriod of the great flowering of American literature, the ___ period is also called 'the American Renaissance'.( ) |
A:Puritan B:Romantic C:Realistic D:modern |
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ticism started with the publication of ___ and ended with Leaves of Grass. |
A:The Sketch Book B:Nature C:The Alhambra D:Leatherstocking Tales |
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tablished?Emerson?as?the?most?eloquent?spokesman?of?New?England?transcendentalism.???( ) |
A:Nature B:Self-reliance C:TheAmericanScholar D:TheOver-soul |
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except?___?belong?to?the?metaphysical?school.??( ) |
A:Donne B:Herbert C:Marvell D:Milton |
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?based?on?the?German?legend?of?a?magician?aspiring?for?knowledge?and?finally?meeting?his?tragic?end?as?a?result?of?selling?his?soul?to?the?Devil.????( ) |
A:Dr.Faustus B:Tamburlaine C:TheJewofMalta D:EdwardII |
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A:AsYouLikeIt B:RomeoandJuliet C:AMidsummerNightDream D:TheTwelfthNight |
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istopher?Marlowe?and?____?are?the?best?representatives?of?the?English?humanists.( ) |
A:EdmundSpenser B:FrancisBacon C:JohnMilton D:ThomasMore |
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ly?a?movement?stimulated?by?a?series?of?historical?events?EXCEPT_________.??( ) |
A:therediscoveryofancientRomanandGreekculture B:thevastexpansionofBritishcoloniesinNorthAmerica C:thenewdiscoveriesingeographyandastrology D:thereligiousreformationandtheeconomicexpansion |
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, together with his theme and the hero, is greatly and permanently influenced by his experiences ( ). |
A:in his childhood B:in the war C:in America D:in Africa |
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ity of the speaker’s choice between safety and the unknown. |
A:Mending the wall B:Home Burial C:The Road not Taken D:Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening |
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rical novel” by Faulkner. |
A:Go Down, Moses B:Light in August C:The Sound and the Fury D:Absalom |
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a ( ) by Fitzgerald. |
A:short story B:novella C:poem D:novel |
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rtant poets in his time, is a leading spokesman of the “Imagist Movement”. |
A:J. D. Salinger B:Ezra Pound C:Richard Wright D:Ralph Ellison |
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ditional verse forms—the sonnet, rhyming couplets, blank verse—with a clear American local speech rhythm, the speech of ( ) farmers with its idiosyncratic diction and syntax. |
A:Southern B:Western C:New Hampshire D:New England |
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true novel in which he depicts a vivid portrait of “The Lost Generation”. |
A:The Sun Also Rises B:A Farewell to Arms C:In Our Time D:For Whom the Bell Tolls |
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works Hemingway presents his philosophy about life anddeath through the depiction of the bull-fight as a kind of microcosmic tragedy? ( ) |
A:Death in the Afternoon B:The Snows of Kilimanjaro C:To Have and Have Not D:The Green Hills of Africa |
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modern American literature comes” refers to ( ). |
A:The Great Gatsby B:The Sun Also Rises C:The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn D:Moby-Dick |
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his literary works with a ( )language. |
A:grand B:pompous C:simple D:vernacular |
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wain as a boy with “a sound heart and a deformed conscience”. |
A:Tom Sawyer B:Huckleberry Finn C:Jim D:Tony |
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oung American girl who gets “killed” by the winter in Rome, and it brought Henry James international fame for the first time. |
A:The American B:The Europeans C:Daisy Miller D:The Portrait of a Lady |
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eodore Dreiser’s greatest work. |
A:An American Tragedy B:Sister Carrie C:The Financier D:The Titan |
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e awarded Nobel Prize for literature except ( ) . |
A:William Faulkner B:Scott Fitzgerald C:John Steinbeck D:Ernest Hemingway |
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ablished Emerson as the most eloquent spokesman of New England Transcendentalism. |
A:Nature B:Self-Reliance C:The American Scholar D:The Over-Soul |
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idiom is noted for the following except ( ). |
A:brevity B:directness C:plainest words D:obscure |
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ickinson is the following except ( ). |
A:war and peace B:love and marriage C:life and death D:religion |
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hich signs the beginning of the American literature?( ) |
A:The Sketch Book B:Leaves of Grass C:Leatherstocking Tales D:Adventures of Huckleberry Finn |
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rican Civil War is generally referred to as ( ) . |
A:the Naturalist Period B:the Modern Period C:the Romantic Period D:the Realistic Period |
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t Letter, “A” may stand for ( ). |
A:Adultery B:Angel C:Amiable D:All the above |
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cade of the 1910s, American literature achieved a new diversity and reached its greatest heights. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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p;is the first American writer to discover an American language and American consciousness. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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bsp;divides the American literature into romantic literature and realist literature. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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n is remembered as the “All American Writer”.() |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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ing be far behind? is from Ozymandias. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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ures of the naturalism at the turn of 19th century are Thomas Hardy, John Galsworthy and Bernard Shaw. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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y Charles Dickens.() |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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of Pride and Prejudice.() |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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ysshe Shelley’s work.() |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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is an age of essay and drama. () |
A:正确 B:错误 |
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comment on American realism. |
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