A. popular; reverenced
B. brash; confident
C. radical; inventive
D. anxious; haunting
Ages, era, period
Ages, era, period
A. Sigmund Freud
B. Sir James Frazer
C. Immanuel Kant
D. all but C
A. its intellectual complexity
B. its union of thought and passion
C. its uncompromising engagement with politics
D. A and B
A. Thom Gunn
B. Dylan Thomas
C. Philip Larkin
D. both A and C
A. the emergence of a mass literate population at whom a new mass-produced literature could be directed
B. a new market for basic textbooks which paid better than sophisticated novels or plays
C. a popular thirst for the \classics,\
driving contemporary writers to the margins
D. none of the above
A. Virginia Woolf’s The Waves
B. Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
C. James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake
D. James Joyce’s Ulysses
A. “nothing happens-twice”
B. “political correctness gone mad”
C. “kitchen sink drama”
D. “angry young men
A. the rise of workshops and the collaborative ethos
B. the diversifying impact of playwrights from the former colonies
C. the death of the musical
D. all but C
A. 1930
B. 1945
C. 1960
D. 2000
A. art for intellect’s sake
B. art for God’s sake
C. art for the masses
D. art for art’s sake