1556711618reading Paper5
1556711618reading Paper5
1556711618reading Paper5
At the time Jane Austen's novels were published – between 1811 and 1818 – English literature was
not part of any academic curriculum. In addition, fiction was under strenuous attack. Certain
religious and political groups felt novels had the power to make so called immoral characters so
interesting young readers would identify with them; these groups also considered novels to be of
little practical use. Even Cole-ridge, certainly no literary reactionary, spoke for many when he
asserted that "novel-reading occasions the destruction of the mind's power. These attitudes towards
novels help explain why Ausjten received little attention from early nineteenth century literary
critics. (In any case, a novelist published anonymously, as Austin was, would not be likely to receive
much critical attention). The literary response that was accorded her, however, was often as incisive
as twentieth century criticism. In his attack in 1816 on novelistic portrayals "outside of ordinary
experience, " for example, Scott made an insightful remarks about the merits of Austen;'s fiction.
Her novels, wrote Scott, "present to the reader an accurate and exact. picture of ordinary everyday
people and places, reminiscent of seventeenth –century Flemish painting. " Scott did not use the
word "realistic probability in judging novels. The critic whitely did not use the word realism either,
but he expressed agreement with Scott's evaluation, and went on to suggest the possibilities for
moral instruction in what we have called Austen's realistic method. Her characters, wrote whitely,
are persuasive agents for moral truth since they are ordinary persons "so clearly evoked that was
feel an interest in their fate as if it were our own Moral instruction, explained Whitely, is more likely
to be effective when conveyed through recognizably human and interesting characters then when
imparted by a sermonizing narrator. Whately especially praised Austen's ability to create characters
who "mingle goodness and villainy, weakness and virtue, as in life they are always mingled. "Whately
concluded his remarks by comparing Austen's art of characterization to Sicken's, stating his
preference for Austin's. often anticipated the reservations of twentieth-century critics. An example
of such a response was Lewes' complaint in 1859 that Austen's range of subjects and characters was
too narrow. Praising her verisimilitude, Lewes added that nonetheless her focus was too often upon
only the unlofty and the common place. (Twentieth-century Marxists, on the other hand, were to
complain about what they saw as her exclusive emphasis on a lofty upper-middle class) in any case,
having been rescued by some literary critics from neglect and indeed gradually lionized by them,
Austen's steadily reached, by the mid-nineteenth century, the enviable pinnacle of being considered
controversial.
Question 1
A. demonstrate the nineteenth-century preference for realistic novels rather than romantic
ones.
B. Explain why Jane Austen's novels were not included in any academic curriculum in the early
nineteenth century
C. Urge a reassessment of Jane Austen's novels by twentieth-century literary critics
D. Describe some of the responses of nineteenth – century critics tol Jane Austen's novels as
well as to fiction in general
E. Argue that realistic character portrayal is the novelist's most difficult task as well as the
aspect of novel most likely to elicit critical response.
Correct Answer : D
Question 2
The passage supplies information for answering which of the following questions?
Correct Answer : A
Question 3
The authors mentions that English literature "was not part of any academic curriculum " in the early
nineteenth century in order to
A. emphasize the need for Jane Austen to increate ordinary, everyday character in her novels.
B. give support to those religious and political groups that had attacked fiction
C. give one reason why Jane Austen's novels received little critical attention in the early
nineteenth century.
D. Suggest the superiority of an informal and unsystematized approach to the study of
literature
E. contrast nineteenth-century attitudes towards English literature with those towards classical
literature
Correct Answer : C
Question 4
The passage supplies information to suggest that the religious and political groups mentioned and
Whately might have agreed that a novel
Question 5
Correct Answer : E
Question 6
The passage suggests that twentieth century Marxists would have admired Jane Austen's noels more
if the novels, a he Marxists understood them, had
Correct Answer : D
Question 7
It can be inferred from the passage that Whately found Dickens character to be
Correct Answer : C
Question 8
According to the passage, the lack of critical attention paid to Jane Austen can be explained by all of
the following nineteenth-century attitudes towards the novel EXCEPT the
Correct Answer : B
Question 9
The author would most likely agree that which of the following ios the best measure of a writer's
literary success?
Correct Answer : C
Passage for Question 10 to 15
Despite their many differences of temperament and of literary perspective, Emerson, Thoreau,
Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman share certain beliefs. Common to all these writers is their
humanistic perspective. Its basic premises are that humans are the spiritual center of the universe
and that in them alone is the clue of the nature, history and ultimately the cosmos itself. Without
denying outright the existenced either of a deity or of brute matter, this perspective nevertheless
rejects them as exclusive principles of interpretation and prefers to explain humans and the world in
terms of humanity itself. This preference is expressed most clearly in the Transcendentalist principle
that the structure of the universe literally duplicates the structure of the individual self: therefore, all
knowledge begins with self-knowledge. This common perspective is almost always universalized. Its
emphasis is not upon the individual as a particular European or American, but upon the hyuman as
universal, freed from the accidents of time, space, birth and talent. Thus, for Emerson, the
"American Scholar turns out to be simply "Main Tinking; while, for Whitman, the "Song of Myself
merges imperceptibly into a song of all the "children of Adam:, where "every atom belonging to me
as good belongs to you. Also common to all five writers is the belief that individual virtue and
happiness depends upon the self-realization, which, in turn, depend upon the harmonious
reconciliation of two universal psychological tendencies: first, the self-asserting impulse of the
individual to withdraw; to remain unique and separate, and to be responsible only to himself or
herself, and second, the self-transcending impulse of the individual to embrace the whole world in
the experience of a single moment and to know and become one with that world. These conflicting
impulses can be seen in the democratic ethic. Democracy advocates individualism, he preservation
of the individual's free-dom and self-expression. But the democratic self is torn between the duty to
self, which is implied by the concept of liberty, and the duty to society, which is implied by the
concept of equality and fraternity. A third assumption common to the five writers is that intuition
and imagination offer a surer road to truth than does abstract logic or scientific method. It is
illustrated by their emphasis upon the introspection-their belief that the clue to external nature is to
be found in the inner world of individual psychology and by their interpretation of experience as, in
essence, symbolic. Both these stresses presume an organic relationship between the self and the
cosmos of which only intuition and imagination can properly take account. These writers' faith in the
imagination and in themselves as practitioners of imagination led them conceive of the writer as a
seer and enabled them to achieve supreme confidence in their own moral and metaphysical insights.
Question 10
The author's discussion of Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman is primarily
concerned with explaining.
Correct Answer : B
Question 11
According to the passage, the humanistic perspective of the five writers presupposes which of the
following?
I)The structures of the universe can be discovered through self-knowledge.
II)The world can be explained in terms of humanity
III)The spiritual and the material worlds are incompatible
A. I only
B. II only
C. I and II only
D. II and III only
E. I, II and III
Correct Answer : C
Question 12
Correct Answer : D
Question 13
According to the passage, the five writers objects to the scientific method primarily because they
think it
A. is not the best way to obtain an understanding of the relationship between the individual
and the cosmos
B. is so specialized that it leads to an understanding of separate parts of the universe but not of
the relationships among those parts
C. cannot provide an adequate explanation of intuition and imagination
D. misleads people into believing they have an understanding of truth, when they do not
E. prevents people from recognizing the symbolic nature of experience.
Correct Answer : A
Question 14
It can be inferred that intuition is important to the five writers primarily because it provides them
with
Correct Answer : D
Question 15
Correct Answer : C