1 |
According to the passage, which of the
following is a true statement about the first and second parts
of Wuthering Heights? |
A. |
The second part has received more attention from
critics. |
B. |
The second part has little relation to the first part. |
C. |
The second part annuls the force of the first part. |
D. |
The second part provides less substantiation for a
"romantic" reading. |
E. |
The second part is better because it is more
realistic. |
2 |
Which of the following inferences about
Henry James's awareness of novelistic construction is
best supported by the passage? |
A. |
James, more than any other novelist, was aware of the
difficulties of novelistic construction. |
B. |
James was very aware of the details of novelistic
construction. |
C. |
James's awareness of novelistic construction
derived from his reading of Bronte. |
D. |
James's awareness of novelistic construction has
led most commentators to see unity in his individual novels. |
E. |
James's awareness of novelistic construction
precluded him from violating the unity of his novels. |
3 |
The author of the passage would be most
likely to agree that an interpretation of a novel should |
A. |
not try to unite heterogeneous elements in the novel |
B. |
not be inflexible in its treatment of the elements in
the novel |
C. |
not argue that the complex use of narrators or of time
shifts indicates a sophisticated structure |
D. |
concentrate on those recalcitrant elements of the
novel that are outside the novel's main structure |
E. |
primarily consider those elements of novelistic
construction of which the author of the novel was aware |
4 |
The author of the passage suggests which
of the following about Hamlet?
- Hamlet has usually attracted critical interpretations that tend to stiffen into theses.
- Hamlet has elements that are not amenable to an all-encompassing critical interpretation.
- Hamlet is less open to an all-encompassing critical interpretation than is Wuthering Heights.
- Hamlet has not received a critical interpretation that has been widely accepted by readers.
|
A. |
I only |
B. |
II only |
C. |
I and IV only |
D. |
III and IV only |
E. |
I, II, and III only |