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  1. What literary movement did William Dean Howells describe as “nothing more and nothing less than the truthful treatment of material”?

naturalism;

realism;

idealism;

romance

  1. How does Hamlin Garland portray Midwestern farmers in his story “Under the Lion’s Paw”?

as blandly helpless victims of railroad companies and land speculators;

as stoic intellectuals willing to combine strenuous work and deep thought;

as sensuous lovers of nature with a tangible connection to the soil;

as hard workers broken by a series of droughts that have left them hopeless

  1. How did local color writing about the legendary West compare with native American writings by Zitkala–Ša, Ohiyesa, and s. Winnemucca in their characters’ relationship to the land?

Westerns romanticized cowboys and gold miners as they exploited the landscape; native writing sadly recorded the loss of the land to the influx of American settlers;

Westerns of this period romanticized attacks on natives as a crusade against infidels, while native writings offered an ideal of coexistence with white settlers;

Westerns tried to depict the psychological effects of the frontier on the individual cowboy’s perspective, while native writings drew from tribal traditions;

Westerns attempted to debunk the heroic myth of the Old West by depicting cowboys as caretakers of the land; native writings portrayed cowboys more realistically as their enemies

  1. In 1893, the historian Frederick Jackson Turner wrote The Significance of the Frontier on American History. Where did he place the frontier in that essay?

at the north bend of the Missouri River in the Great Plains;

at the Continental Divide in the Rocky Mountains;

at the Pacific Coast;

he believed the frontier had vanished

  1. Which of the following sentences best defines literary naturalism?

Naturalism represented life truly through a series of exterior descriptions of characters based on their class, wealth, psychology, and ethnic background;

Naturalism presented characters living harmoniously with the natural landscape and suggested that readers had a responsibility to care for the environment;

Naturalism focused on how life ought to be lived by repeatedly suggesting ideal moral and spiritual significances behind seemingly ordinary narrative events;

Naturalism depicted a world in which fate had replaced free will, characters were products of their environments, and events usually did not turn out for the best

  1. What common ambition is shared by the regional writings of Mary Austin, Mary Wilkins Freeman, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Sarah Orne Jewett?

to represent the severe and repressed religious customs of New England;

to encourage readers to see the world from a woman’s perspective;

to depict and warn women about the dangers of the wilderness;

to stress the universal plight of women in all regions of the country

  1. Which of the following was not a “muckraking,” anti–corruption writer?

Frank Norris of San Francisco;

Stephen Crane of New York City;

William Marcy Tweed of New York City;

Lincoln Steffens of San Francisco

  1. Which of the following magazines established in the second half of the nineteenth century was devoted to western-themed writing?

the Overland Monthly;

the Atlantic Monthly;

Scribner’s Monthly;

the Galaxy

  1. Which of the following best defines “local color” writing?

Local color writers were realists who used regionally specific settings for their literature;

Local color writers were women authors who responded to increased opportunities to publish in periodicals by appealing to specifically regional audiences;

Local color writers tried to borrow techniques of landscape painters to represent regional characters and events through recognizably broad-stroke treatments;

Local color writers sought to capture regionally distinctive perspectives by representing characteristic dialects, idioms, social relationships, and natural environments

  1. What term was given to the nonfiction prose writings of the late nineteenth century that brought the disciplines of psychology, philosophy, and sociology to the politics of social reform?

the literature of argument;

muckraking literature;

Molly Maguires;

problem prose

  1. Which African-American author and statesman did W. E .B. Du Bois criticize in The Souls of Black Folk (1907)?

James Weldon Johnson;

Booker T. Washington;

Frederick Douglass;

Charles Chesnutt

  1. Which of the following foreign authors provided the earliest influence on American authors interested in writing a realistic international art story?

Anton Chekhov;

Leo Tolstoy;

Gustave Flaubert;

Émile Zola

  1. Which regional population does Kate Chopin portray in her novel The Awakening?

the Mississippi river culture of St. Louis, Missouri;

the Ozark miners of central Arkansas;

the former slaves of the Jim Crow South, with an emphasis on the blacks of Alabama;

the creoles of New Orleans and Louisiana

  1. In the novel “Huckleberry Finn” written by Mark Twain the main characters Huck and Jim share all of the following qualities except:

belief in superstitions;

loyalty to friends;

enjoyment of playing practical jokes on friends;

sharp survival skills

  1. Which of the following best describes Huck's feelings about his role in helping Jim run away from Miss Watson?

He dislikes Miss Watson and is happy to be involved in any scheme that will harm her financially;

Because he has grown up poor and friendless himself, Huck identifies with oppressed slaves and sees slavery as morally wrong;

He is convinced that he is behaving immorally by stealing Miss Watson's property, but he gives in to his own wicked tendencies;

He never intended to allow Jim to escape to the North