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Quiz about Around the World of Literature
Quiz about Around the World of Literature

Around the World of Literature Quiz


Here are twenty trivia questions about twenty pieces of literature from twenty different countries. You might know authors from the United States, but do you know any from Trinidad?

A multiple-choice quiz by adams627. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
adams627
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
305,694
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
20
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
13 / 20
Plays
1025
Awards
Top 5% quiz!
- -
Question 1 of 20
1. United States: Which author's novel about a Lithuanian family struggling in Packingtown led to the creation of the Pure Food and Drug Act? Hint


Question 2 of 20
2. Mexico: Which work by Octavio Paz is a collection of nine essays, including "The Day of the Dead" and "The Dialectic of Solitude"? Hint


Question 3 of 20
3. Chile: Which breakout novel by Isabel Allende describes the Trueba family women over three generations? Hint


Question 4 of 20
4. Trinidad: What name completes the title of V.S. Naipaul's famous 1961 novel, "A House for _________"? Hint


Question 5 of 20
5. Colombia: "One Hundred Years of Solitude," by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, chronicles the life of the Buendia family in what fictional town? Hint


Question 6 of 20
6. United Kingdom: According to Matthew Arnold, "ignorant armies clash" at what titular locale on the English channel? Hint


Question 7 of 20
7. Italy: What play, written by Luigi Pirandello, has characters including The Stepdaughter and The Father? Hint


Question 8 of 20
8. France: In "Candide," which long-lost love does the title character search for all across Europe before finding that her wondrous beauty has disappeared? Hint


Question 9 of 20
9. Czech Republic: Which author of strange tales like "The Trial" lends his name to an adjective meaning senseless and disorienting? Hint


Question 10 of 20
10. (Ancient) Greece: In what Aristophanes comedy do the title animals chant "Brecece-cecs"? Hint


Question 11 of 20
11. Algeria: Albert Camus wrote "The Plague," which takes place in what fictional Algerian city? Crossword puzzlers might know this one pretty well! Hint


Question 12 of 20
12. Nigeria: What is the name of the sequel to Chinua Achebe's famous "Things Fall Apart"? Hint


Question 13 of 20
13. South Africa: Which protagonist of Alan Paton's "Cry, the Beloved Country" lives in Ixopo? Hint


Question 14 of 20
14. Iran: Which ancient Persian author, famous for his "Rubaiyat", also found a way to geometrically solve cubic equations? Hint


Question 15 of 20
15. India: Which novel, which begins with the protagonists falling out of a plane, earned Salman Rushdie a fatwa from the Ayatollah Khomeini? Hint


Question 16 of 20
16. Russia: What author created Luzhin, Dunia, Alyosha, Smerdyakov, "The Underground Man", Prince Myshkin, Zosima, and Lizaveta? Hint


Question 17 of 20
17. China: Which of the following is not one of the "Four Great Classic Novels of Chinese Literature", which were written between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries AD? Hint


Question 18 of 20
18. Japan: "The Tale of Genji", often considered the world's first novel, is a classic by what female author? Hint


Question 19 of 20
19. Australia: Who wrote "Schindler's Ark", which would later become the inspiration for Steven Spielburg's successful Holocaust movie? Hint


Question 20 of 20
20. Oceania: Keri Hulme, author of "The Bone People", hails from what Pacific island country? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. United States: Which author's novel about a Lithuanian family struggling in Packingtown led to the creation of the Pure Food and Drug Act?

Answer: Upton Sinclair

Sinclair's "The Jungle" tells the story of Jurgis and his family struggling in the brutal conditions of a meatpacking factory in Chicago. Sinclair's motive for writing the book was to promote his socialist viewpoint by striking out at the inhumane treatment of capitalist-owned factories.

However, the major public response was one of outrage at the unhygienic meatpacking plants. As Sinclair famously said, "I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach."
2. Mexico: Which work by Octavio Paz is a collection of nine essays, including "The Day of the Dead" and "The Dialectic of Solitude"?

Answer: "The Labyrinth of Solitude"

Although the others were works by Paz, "The Labyrinth of Solitude" is one of his better-known collections. In it, he discusses the Mexican identity and the combination of native and Spanish cultures. By denying one part of the culture, Mexicans become stuck in a labyrinth of solitude.
3. Chile: Which breakout novel by Isabel Allende describes the Trueba family women over three generations?

Answer: "The House of the Spirits"

"The House of the Spirits," Allende's masterpiece, is a paragon of magic realism, a generally Latin American literary movement. Isabel Allende was the niece of Chilean president Salvador Allende, who was in power from 1970 to 1973.
4. Trinidad: What name completes the title of V.S. Naipaul's famous 1961 novel, "A House for _________"?

Answer: Mr. Biswas

"A House for Mr. Biswas" was Naipaul's breakthrough work about a Trinidadian man born of Indian parents. Generally regarded as his most important work, the novel examines life in the postcolonial era.
5. Colombia: "One Hundred Years of Solitude," by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, chronicles the life of the Buendia family in what fictional town?

Answer: Macondo

"One Hundred Years of Solitude" may be the best-known example of magic realism. After Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula Buendia help found Macondo, numerous strange events occur as the family begins to break apart. Garcia Marquez's work shows that faults of one generation are repeated in subsequent ones, as characters constantly repeat the failures of their ancestors.
6. United Kingdom: According to Matthew Arnold, "ignorant armies clash" at what titular locale on the English channel?

Answer: "Dover Beach"

"Dover Beach" is a touching poem that describes the sad and gloomy setting. Anthony Hecht, 1986 American Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry, wrote a parody of the poem where the second word in the title is slightly mispronounced.
7. Italy: What play, written by Luigi Pirandello, has characters including The Stepdaughter and The Father?

Answer: "Six Characters in Search of an Author"

The play, greeted by shouts of "Madhouse" upon its premiere, is a classic example of the Theater of the Absurd. The six titular characters are The Father, The Mother, The Son, The Stepdaughter, The Boy, and The Child.
8. France: In "Candide," which long-lost love does the title character search for all across Europe before finding that her wondrous beauty has disappeared?

Answer: Cunegonde

Candide, a social satire written by Voltaire, pokes fun at extreme optimism through the eyes of Candide and his tutor, Dr. Pangloss. Pangloss represents German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz, whose belief in extreme optimism was rejected by Voltaire. As terrible events occur to Candide and his friends, Voltaire uses matter-of-fact and direct language, as though the events were commonplace.

In the end, Candide learns that the greatest happiness is through manual labor.
9. Czech Republic: Which author of strange tales like "The Trial" lends his name to an adjective meaning senseless and disorienting?

Answer: Franz Kafka

Kafkaesque has entered the English language after Kafka's works stretched the limits of imagination. Strange, disconnected things happen in Kafka's stories. In "The Metamorphosis", the protagonist Gregor Samsa is turned into a giant bug. In "The Trial", protagonist Josef K is arrested for no reason and is eventually stabbed.
10. (Ancient) Greece: In what Aristophanes comedy do the title animals chant "Brecece-cecs"?

Answer: "The Frogs"

Although "The Wasps" and "The Birds" are works by Aristophanes, "The Frogs" is the correct answer. The plot of "The Frogs" follows the story of Dionysus and his servant Xanthias as they enter the Greek underworld.
11. Algeria: Albert Camus wrote "The Plague," which takes place in what fictional Algerian city? Crossword puzzlers might know this one pretty well!

Answer: Oran

"The Plague" is a thematic novel about human nature in the time of catastrophe, specifically a bubonic plague epidemic. Despite Albert Camus' request not to be considered a existentialist, the novel is considered part of that literary movement. Camus also wrote "The Stranger", a novel about Meersault, a remorseless Frenchman who shoots a Arab on a beach and is eventually sentenced to death.
12. Nigeria: What is the name of the sequel to Chinua Achebe's famous "Things Fall Apart"?

Answer: "No Longer at Ease"

"No Longer at Ease" follows the story of "Things Fall Apart" protagonist Okonkwo's grandson, Obi Okonkwo. Obi is forced to accept bribes, which he is arrested for taking at the end of the novel. The book's title comes from TS Eliot's poem, "The Journey of the Magi"; "Things Fall Apart" got its title from "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats.
13. South Africa: Which protagonist of Alan Paton's "Cry, the Beloved Country" lives in Ixopo?

Answer: Stephen Kumalo

Although all of the above were characters in the novel, black pastor Stephen Kumalo is the protagonist. The novel begins as Kumalo goes to Johannesburg to help his sister Gertrude; while there, Kumalo finds out that his son Absalom was arrested for murdering white activist Arthur Jarvis. The novel itself is a moving story about South African apartheid and social segregation by race.
14. Iran: Which ancient Persian author, famous for his "Rubaiyat", also found a way to geometrically solve cubic equations?

Answer: Omar Khayyam

In addition to writing "The Rubaiyat", Omar Khayyam was an accomplished mathematician and astronomer. He created the basis of the Iranian calendar, still in use today, and he also proposed a heliocentric view of the solar system. "The Rubaiyat" is his set of thousands of quatrains, translated by Edward FitzGerald.
15. India: Which novel, which begins with the protagonists falling out of a plane, earned Salman Rushdie a fatwa from the Ayatollah Khomeini?

Answer: "The Satanic Verses"

"The Satanic Verses" are a set of verses in the Koran that allow for the worship of three Pagan goddesses: Allat, Uzza, and Manat. After a 1989 Pakistan revolt, the Ayatollah called for a fatwa, that all Muslims should kill Rushdie and his publishers for his blasphemy about Islam.

Although Rushdie avoided death, some of his publishers and translators have been assassinated. The novel itself was successful, a Booker Prize finalist in 1988.
16. Russia: What author created Luzhin, Dunia, Alyosha, Smerdyakov, "The Underground Man", Prince Myshkin, Zosima, and Lizaveta?

Answer: Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Luzhn, Dunia, and Lizaveta are from his "Crime and Punishment". Alyosha, Smerdyakov, and Zosima appear in "The Brothers Karamazov". "The Underground Man" is an epithet given to the unnamed narrator of "Notes from the Underground", and Prince Myshkin is the title character of "The Idiot".
17. China: Which of the following is not one of the "Four Great Classic Novels of Chinese Literature", which were written between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries AD?

Answer: The Analects

"The Analects", by Confucius, was written hundreds of years before the other three. Collectively, "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", by Luo Guanzhong; "Journey to the West", published anonymously; "Dream of the Red Chamber", by Cao Xueqin; and "Water Margin" (or "Outlaws of the Marsh" among other titles), by Shi Naian, make up the four classic novels in Chinese literature.
18. Japan: "The Tale of Genji", often considered the world's first novel, is a classic by what female author?

Answer: Murasaki Shikibu

Written in the eleventh century, "The Tale of Genji" is a subject of debate as whether it's the world's first novel, modern novel, or first classic novel; however, it has remained an important work of Japanese literature. The Japanese 2000 yen banknote features a scene from "The Tale of Genji" in honor of Murasaki Shikibu.
19. Australia: Who wrote "Schindler's Ark", which would later become the inspiration for Steven Spielburg's successful Holocaust movie?

Answer: Thomas Keneally

In addition to writing the novel about Schindler, who saved more than one thousand Jews from concentration camps, Keneally was also a film actor. He wrote the novel "The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith" and also played a minor role in the movie version. He also acted in "The Devil's Playground".
20. Oceania: Keri Hulme, author of "The Bone People", hails from what Pacific island country?

Answer: New Zealand

Keri Hulme, one of the the most significant New Zealand authors, is still alive and has changed her focus to poetry and short stories after the success of her only novel, "The Bone People". That novel won the 1985 Booker Prize and discusses the relationship between Western and Maori cultures in New Zealand.

Thanks for taking my quiz, please stop and rate it. I hope you learned something about authors from around the world!
Source: Author adams627

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