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A World of Women Poets

Crafted by Trivia Architect LilahDeDah

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Poetry : A World of Women Poets

Introduction:
"Her name, birth country, birth year, the title of (or a line from) one of her poems. I'll give you three (I'm generous like that) and you pick the fourth. The real objective is to learn more about these well-versed women. For the poetry-obsessed only!"


1. Her story is one of the earliest examples of Hebrew poetry, dating from the 2nd half of the 12th century BCE. Who wrote "I arose a mother in Israel. They chose new gods; Then was war in the gates:"?
    Jael
    Ruth
    Judith
    Deborah


2. Sappho of Lesbos is considered the most important lyric poet of Western antiquity. She was born in Greece in the 7th-6th century BCE. Which of the following was was written by Sappho?
    The Colossus
    Prayer to Aphrodite
    Lady Lazarus
    Daddy


3. Within her masterwork, "The Tale of Genji", this Japanese author placed a number of stunning poems. She was born in 974.
    Yosano Akiko
    Murasaki Shikibu
    Ema Saiko
    Goto Miyoko


4. The traditional songs and poems of many cultures were written by women whose names are lost to us. The poetic form called "jarcha" flourished in this country in 1000-1300. Jarchas were written in Arabic or Hebrew, with a last stanza in the country's native tongue. Their subject is often women's carnal side, as in the following:
"I will make love
with you,
but only if you hold me
so my earrings
touch the jewelry
on my ankles."
In what country with both a rich Jewish and a rich Arab heritage were these poems written by now-anonymous women?
    Turkey
    Germany
    Spain
    Morocco


5. Africa, of course, has a rich oral poetic tradition in its many languages. A Hottentot woman created the undated poem "Song of the Lioness for her Cub" in what present-day country?
    Nigeria
    Ethiopia
    South Africa
    Kenya


6. Born around 1460, Gwerfyl Mechain is one of the very few early poets from this country whose work has been preserved. One of her best-known poems is "The Lady of the Ferry Inn". Her country?
    Scotland
    Wales
    Denmark
    Lithuania


7. Vittoria da Colonna epitomized the Italian Renaissance. Like her friend Michelangelo, her preferred poetic form was the sonnet. One of her most famous begins, "I live on this depraved and lonely cliff".
In what year was this noble lady born?
    1390
    1490
    1590
    1690


8. Born sometime in the 16th century, Lal Ded was a wandering mystic who wrote the words,
"To learn the scriptures is easy,
to live them hard.
The search for the Real
is no simple matter."
Through which Asian country did Lal Ded wander?
    Persia (modern Iran)
    Siam (modern Thailand)
    Malaysia
    Kashmir (modern India)


9. Although she was born in the mid-seventeeth century, this first important literary figure of the New World wrote poems that still ring true today. What is the name of the Mexican nun who wrote "She Proves the Inconsistency of the Desires and Criticisms of Men Who Accuse Women of What They Themselves Cause"?
    Angélica Tornero
    Dolores Dorantes
    Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
    Laura Solórzano


10. This woman endured much during her life, including the suppression of her work by the Soviet Union and the execution of her ex-husband. She was born in 1889, and one of her best-known poems is "Requiem 1935-1940". Name this Russian survivor.
    Anna Karenina
    Tatiana Larina
    Natasha Rostova
    Anna Akhmatova


11. Despite her short life (1892-1938), Alfonsina Storni published several volumes of beautiful and tragic poetry. Perhaps not surprisingly, this author of "I Am Going to Sleep (Suicide Poem)" drowned herself at Mar del Plata. She was born in Switzerland, but which country did Alfonsina call home from the age of four?
    Brazil
    Italy
    Argentina
    France


12. Another writer who died an untimely death (of TB, when she was only 31), was this woman, who was born in Russia, lived in Finland, and wrote in German and Swedish. Two of her best-known poems are "What Is Tomorrow?" and "Vierge Moderne".
    Edith Wharton
    Edith Södergran
    Edith Bunker
    Dame Edith Evans


13. Born in 1916, Anne Hébert wrote in French and published novels, short stories, and screenplays in addition to poetry such as 1953's "Le Tombeau des Rois" ("The Tomb of the Kings"). Which country is proud to claim Mlle. Hébert?
    Martinique
    Canada
    Mozambique
    Morocco


14. Judith Wright is the only Australian woman ever considered for the Nobel Prize in Literature. In addition to her poems such as "South of My Day's Circle", she also supported environmental reform and Aboriginal rights. In what year was she born in Queensland?
    1955
    1915
    1815
    1855


15. Although this poet and activist emigrated to the USA, she was born in England in 1923. She wrote "Overheard over S.E. Asia" and one of her most famous, "The Ache of Marriage".
    Adrienne Rich
    Denise Levertov
    Erica Jong
    Anne Sexton


16. Our next poet is the Nobel Prize-winning Wislawa Szymborska, also born in 1923. While you try to guess her native country, you may enjoy this moving excerpt from "Tortures".

"Nothing has changed.
The body shudders as it shuddered
before the founding of Rome and after,
in the twentieth century before and after Christ.
Tortures are as they were, it's just the earth that's grown smaller,
and whatever happens seems right on the other side of the wall."
    Poland
    Hungary
    Romania
    Croatia


17. Born in Nicaragua in 1924, this woman wrote (and was exiled because of) her revolutionary poetry in El Salvador. One of her most moving poems is "Accounting" (sometimes translated as "Summing Up").
    Colette Inez
    Sonia Sanchez
    Claribel Alegria
    Nikki Giovanni


18. Born in 1942, Sharon Olds was the New York State Poet Laureate from 1998-2000. Her appointment was controversial, perhaps because of her honest and frank examination of "women's issues". Which of the poems below was written by Ms. Olds?
    Sex Without Love
    The Truth the Dead Know
    For My Lover, Returning to His Wife
    In Celebration of My Uterus


19. Great new poetic voices continue to be heard. Emma LaRocque, born in 1949, educates both as a professor and in her writings, which often deal with Metis and First Nations themes. A beautiful example is "The Red in Winter". Where does Dr. LaRocque live and teach?
    USA
    Canada
    South Africa
    Australia


20. Finally, we arrive at the last and youngest of our transcendent female poets...Joy Harjo, whose work is modern and touching and important. Native American themes (she is a member of the Muskogee Nation) are prominent in Ms. Harjo's work, such as the moving "She Had Some Horses". In what year was Joy born?
    1951
    1911
    1901
    1931


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