Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Objective UGC NET- Age of Elizabeth

Hello friends,
I know you are busy with your studies. I wish you all the best. Here I am presenting some questions from the Age of Elizabeth. Please check your knowledge. If you don't do well don't worry. Just keep reading. If you have done well don't be contented with it.
Thank you.

Objective UGC NET- Age of Elizabeth Part 1
1. The famous translation of Ovid's Metamorphosis into English was made by
-Arthur Golding
2."Donne would be hanged for not keeping the regular accent." Whose commented thus?
Ben Jonson
3.Among the University Wits who was known as "the true child of Renaissance" ?
Christopher Marlowe
4. The best trends of Reformation were presented by Spenser in his?
-Faerie Queene
5. Thomas Kyd wrote his Spanish Tragedy in the style of?
-Seneca
6. Alexander and Compaspe is a play written by
-John Lyly
7. Mortimer, Isabella and Gaveston are characters who appears in Marlowe's play
-Edward II
8. Who does Grierson - Smith call the 'morning star of Elizabethan drama' ?
-Christopher Marlowe
9. Who is the author of Steel Glass ?
Gascoigne

10. In which year was the Globe Theatre built ?
1599

11. Shakespeare's Sonnets were first published in
1609
12.When Sidney died, Spenser wrote an elegy on his death. What was it’s title?
Astrophel
13. Sidney's Apologie for Poetrie is a reply to :
Gosson's School of Abuse
14. In his Apologie for Poetrie, Sidney :
defends the Three Dramatic Unities
15. ––  –– University Wit has written only Tragedies.
Marlowe
16. While referring to whom does Ruskin said, "He has only heroines and no heroes" ?
Shakespeare
17. The Faerie Queene is an allegory. In this Queen Elizabeth is allegorized through the character of :
Gloriana
18. Who calls Spenser the 'Poets' Poet' ?
Charles Lamb
19. For what is the phrase 'The Mousetrap' used by Shakespeare ?
The play within the play in Hamlet
20. Spenser dedicates the Preface to The Faerie Queene to :
Sir Walter Raleigh
21. 'Spenser writ no language.' Who said this ?
Ben Jonson
22. Bacon's Essays are modeled on the Essays of :
Montaigne

23. "A place sheweth the man and it sheweth some to the better, and some to the worse." These lines occur in ?
Bacon’s ‘Of Great Place’

24. “I Know I have the body but of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of King, ?” These lines are spoken by…

Queen Elizabeth, Tilbury speech 1588

 25. "......... a mixture of falsehood is like alloy in coin of gold and silver, which may make the metal work the better, but it embaseth it". In which essay of Bacon do these lines occur ?
Of Truth
26. "We are such stuff
As dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep"
Who speaks these lines?
Prospero
27. "Neither a borrower nor a lender be :
Polonius (Hamlet)
28. Who speaks about Shakespeare thus :"Others abide our question. Thou art free, We ask and ask - thou smilest and art still Out - topping knowledge."
Matthew Arnold
29. "The lunatic, the lover, and the poet, Are of imagination all compact."
In which play do these lines occur ?
A Mid - Summer Night's Dream
30. Who wrote Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus?

w. w. Greg.


Friday, September 28, 2018

Chaucer for NET English Exam

Dear Friends,

Chaucer is always a sure shot in the NET exam. Take any previous question papers, you can see at least two or three questions from Chaucer. Most often the question comes from his Magnum Opus The Canterbury Tales. Hence it is worthy to study his characters and the nature of their stories. Now a days the direct common questions are avoided. So here I have included some uncommon questions. This is not comprehensive but will certainly help you.
At the same time, I will certainly request you to dedicate some time for Chaucer apart from this. Thank you. All the best.



1.                                  One of the Tales in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is in prose. Which of these ?
2.                                  How many ecclesiastical characters are portrayed in the Prologue ?
3.                                  Who wears the golden broach with letters "Amor Vincit Omnia"
4.                                  Which ecclesiastical character of the Prologue likes hunting and has fine horses?
5.                                 How many mortal battles Knight fought for?
6.                                 “He is rogue, seducer of women and scoundrel.” Which character in referred like this in the Prologue?
7.                                 “Of his visage children were aferd. About which character does Chaucer speak thus?
8.                                 Who tells the Prioress “tale the biography of Saint Cecilia”?
9.                                 How many pilgrims in the Prologue represent Military Profession?
10.                             ----– is Chaucer’s prose work?
11.                               How  many lines are there in The Prologue?
12.                             What is the rhyme scheme of Chaucerian stanza
13.                              Which pilgrims tale forms the last one in “Canterbury Tales”?
14.                             Who is referred as “the most modest man” and “as modest as maid”?
15.                              Who is referred as “a load of fire” and “ a lover and lusty bachelor” ?
16.                             What is the name of the Prioress?
17.                              Who wears green hood and carries “bright and keen peacock arrows”?
18.                             Who is referred as the “noble pillar of order”?
19.                             What is the name of the Friar?
20.                            Who wears a “motley dress” and has a forking beard in The Prologue
21.                             Which character is referred as “there was no busy a man as he”?
22.                            Where did the shipman come from?
23.                            What is the name of Wife of Bath?
24.                            How many stories are told in the “Canterbury tales”?
25.                            The Pardoner hails from the hospital of?






Ans:
1.      The Parson's Tale
2.     The Prioress, The Monk, The Friar, The Summoner, The Pardoner, Parson, The clerk ( not an ecclesiastical character but he is studying at church), The second nun)
3.     The Prioress
4.     The Monk
5.     15
6.     The Monk
7.     The Summoner
8.     The Second Nun
9.     3
10. Treatise on the Astrolabe. (wrote for his son)
11.   858
12. ab ab bcc
13.  The Parson’s
14. The Knight
15.  The squire
16. Madam Eglantyne
17.  The Yeoman
18. The Friar
19. Hubert
20.                        The Merchant
21. The Sergeant of Law
22.                        Dartmouth
23.Ansel
24.                        24(21 complete)
25. Blessed Mary of Rouncivalle







3
3



Thursday, September 27, 2018

Do I Need Coaching to Clear NET in English Literature?


This is a question that haunts most of the students who appear NET exam year after year. Some believe a coaching is a magic pill that will give them success. But check the results of any coaching centres. Even the reputed ones get 10 to 15 percent results! By considering the number of candidates who appear for this exam and those who get coaching the ratio could be 1:1000. That is only one among thousand gets training.
 But if you live close to a good coaching centre, and you have just completed your MA, you have  means and time then coaching is worth a try. Then comes online coaching. If you are motivated there is nothing wrong in that investment. But recent studies by the universities who conduct MOOC (Massive Open Online Courses) reveal that less than 11% complete their courses. So before you spend money ask yourself whether you can sit in front of the screen regularly for two to three hours.
I am not confusing you. What I want to tell that you have to dedicate 8 to 10 hours daily for two to three months if you want to clear this exam whether you opt for a coaching or not. If you have faith in your abilities then you don't need a coaching.  So stop all other distractions. Even keep your phone turned off during your study time. Work out a time table. That is how much time you want to spend on studying new things and revising what you already studied. If you want a list of books to begin with read my first blog titled "How to Crack UGC NET in English Literature?" Though it is an old blog what I wrote is relevant even today! I am not boasting. Because contents in Literature remain the same.
So what are you waiting for? Go and pick any history of English literature book and start working. This time you will get it. Be positive!
"A Positive mindset leads to prosperity and a Negative one to poverty". Napoleon Hill.
Thanks for reading!

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Pass online UGC NET/JRF in English


“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.” 

Dear Student….
My best wishes in advance! I will focus on the preparation aspect in this blog.
It has got five stages.
Stage One:
All competitive exams are about a combination of strategy and hard work. Plan comes first before preparation. So first chalk out a plan that works for you!
So what I suggest is this. In the second paper there are 100 questions from 14 different areas. By keeping the vastness of the syllabus it is nearly impossible to study them all. But we don’t need 100 marks either! Thus select five to six areas as core focus. For example, say Romantic Period to the Contemporary Literature and Literary Theory. This covers 5 units and on average you can expect close to 40 questions! (i.e 7 to 8 questions on average per unit)
Stage Two:
Now pick up a standard History of English Literature book. I leave that choice to you. You are wise enough to select one. You can also download it free from some website.
Then start reading the units that you have selected. Make a quick reading to get a connection of it. Then read it again and take notes of all the writers and works mentioned. Google the summary of important works. If you look at the previous question papers, about eighty percent were direct questions. So if you do this you will able to answer many questions.
Stage Three:   
Now choose other five or six left out areas. If possible try to read a short history and make short notes. Don’t study multiple choice question books alone! It is a trap. You can use such books for revision but not as primary materials.
Stage Four:
Now pick your syllabus that you have already studied. Browse through it. In multiple choice exams “familiarity is more important”. So revise the entire syllabus. This should be done only after doing from stage one to three. I have seen many students repeatedly studying their syllabus again and again to get a different result!
Stage Five:
Study the basics. For example after studying criticism from Glossary of Literary Terms you should at least know the following terms.
Carnivalisation, Anti-historicism, A priori, Archetype, Canon, Chora, critique,  difference, dissociation of sensibility, dream analysis, ecriture, engagement, gynocriticism, id, ego, imaginary, impressionistic criticism, intertextuality, libido, matriarchy,  objective correlative, Oedipus complex, phenomenology, logocentricism, dialogic texts-monologic texts, touchstone, synchronic study, test, trace, positivist philosophy, repression, Andocentric, super-ego, ideology, mirror stage, neurosis.  

Let’s clear UGC NET exam this time.

In the next blog, I will speak about how to attempt online UGC NET exam in a time bound manner.
Thank you for reading!