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UGC NET English August 2024 Shift 2 Solved Paper: British Literature & Classics


UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 1

Focus: Classical Foundations, The Printing Revolution, and Shakespearean Chronology.

Q.1

Q. The salient tendencies of Hellenistic philosophy are:
A. Cynicism
B. Epicureanism
C. Stoicism
D. Surrealism
E. Expressionism

1) A, B and D only
2) A, B and C only
3) A, D and E only
4) A, B and E only
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 2 (A, B and C only)

Hellenistic philosophy (c. 323 BCE – 31 BCE) is characterized by schools like Cynicism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism, which sought to provide individual peace of mind. Surrealism and Expressionism are 20th-century artistic and literary movements.

Q.2

Q. The Latin epic Aeneid by Virgil:
A. Incorporates various legends of Aeneas and makes him the founder of Roman greatness.
B. Relates the story of the legendary founding of Rome
C. Relates the story of the legendary founding of Lavinium
D. Recounts the story of Aeneas’ journey in the first 6 books, patterned after Homer’s Odyssey.
E. Recounts the story of Aeneas’ journey in the last 6 books, patterned after Homer’s Odyssey.

1) A, C and D only
2) A, B and D only
3) A, D and E only
4) A, C and E only
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 1 (A, C and D only)

Virgil's Aeneid establishes Aeneas as the ancestor of the Roman people. While he is the founder of Lavinium (C), his descendants Romulus and Remus found Rome. Structurally, the first six books follow the Odyssean pattern of wandering (D), while the latter six follow the Iliadic pattern of warfare.

Q.3

Q. Chronologically arrange the following in order of their publication/occurrence:
A. Caxton printed Malory's Morte D'Arthur
B. Establishment of Caxton's printing press
C. Gutenberg printed the Bible in Mainz, Germany
D. Caxton's History of Troy, first book printed in English
E. First translation of the Christian Bible into English by John Wycliffe

1) B, E, D, C, A
2) C, B, E, A, D
3) E, C, D, B, A
4) D, A, B, C, E
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (E, C, D, B, A)

Chronology:
1. Wycliffe's Bible (c. 1382): Manuscript era.
2. Gutenberg Bible (1455): European printing begins.
3. History of Troy (1473): First English book (printed abroad).
4. Caxton’s Press (1476): Established at Westminster.
5. Morte D'Arthur (1485): One of Caxton's most famous printed works.

Q.4

Q. Chronologically arrange the following works in order of their publication:
A. Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto
B. 95 Theses at Wittenberg by Martin Luther
C. The First Book of Common Prayer by Thomas Cranmer
D. Utopia by Thomas More
E. The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli

1) E, D, B, A, C
2) A, C, B, E, D
3) E, B, C, A, D
4) D, A, B, C, E
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 1 (E, D, B, A, C)

Chronology:
1. The Prince (1513): Written by Machiavelli.
2. Utopia (1516): Published by More.
3. 95 Theses (1517): Nailed by Luther.
4. Orlando Furioso (1532): Final expanded edition.
5. Book of Common Prayer (1549): English Reformation liturgical text.

Q.5

Q. Arrange the following plays by Shakespeare in order of their production/publication:
A. Twelfth Night
B. The Taming of the Shrew
C. Much Ado About Nothing
D. Romeo and Juliet
E. The Winter’s Tale

1) D, C, B, A, E
2) B, D, A, E, C
3) A, D, C, B, E
4) B, D, C, A, E
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 4 (B, D, C, A, E)

Shakespearean Chronology:
1. Taming of the Shrew (c. 1590): Early comedy.
2. Romeo and Juliet (c. 1595): Lyrical tragedy.
3. Much Ado About Nothing (c. 1598): High comedy.
4. Twelfth Night (c. 1601): Festive comedy.
5. The Winter’s Tale (c. 1610): Late romance.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 2

Focus: Renaissance Aphorisms and Neoclassical Literary Principles.

Q.6

Q. Identify the name of the essayist who made the following assertion:
“If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end in doubts, but if he will be content to begin with doubts, he shall end in certainties.”

1) Richard Hooker
2) Sir Francis Bacon
3) Sir Richard Steele
4) Joseph Addison
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 2 (Sir Francis Bacon)

This aphorism is found in Francis Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning (1605). As the "Father of Empiricism," Bacon advocated for the scientific method and inductive reasoning. He believed that intellectual growth requires a willingness to question established dogmas (doubts) to reach verifiable truths (certainties).

Q.7

Q. Who said that an author has no claim to original thought, but only to apt presentation of what was already being thought by others?

1) Alexander Pope
2) Ezra Pound
3) Max MĂźller
4) Harold Bloom
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 1 (Alexander Pope)

In his landmark work An Essay on Criticism (1711), Alexander Pope defines "True Wit" through the famous couplet: “True wit is nature to advantage dressed, / What oft was thought, but ne’er so well expressed.” Neoclassical theory prioritized the refinement and elegant presentation of universal truths over the Romantic ideal of radical originality.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 3

Focus: Political and Literary Clubs of the 18th Century.

Q.8

Q. Who among the following were not associated with the Kit-Cat Club?
A. George Etherege
B. Richard Steele
C. Samuel Johnson
D. William Congreve
E. Joseph Addison

1) B and D only
2) B and E only
3) A and C only
4) D and E only
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (A and C only)

The Kit-Cat Club was a 17th/18th-century club with strong Whig political leanings. Key members included the famous essayist duo Addison (E) and Steele (B), along with playwright William Congreve (D).

  • George Etherege (A): Was a Restoration dramatist associated with the earlier courtly circles of Charles II, not this specific Whig club.
  • Samuel Johnson (C): While a giant of the 18th century, he was a Tory and famously associated with "The Literary Club" (or simply "The Club"), which he founded much later in 1764.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 4

Focus: Dramatic Parody, Romantic Criticism, and the Socio-Political Novel.

Q.9

Q. Which one of the following plays mocks the Restoration drama of John Dryden and Thomas Otway?

1) The Beggar's Opera by John Gay
2) Tom Thumb by Henry Fielding
3) The Critic by R.B. Sheridan
4) The Rehearsal by George Villiers
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 4 (The Rehearsal by George Villiers)

George Villiers' The Rehearsal (1671) is a meta-theatrical satire directed at the bombastic conventions of Heroic Tragedy. The character 'Bayes' is a direct caricature of John Dryden. The play lampoons the absurdly high-flown language and artificial plots common in Dryden and Thomas Otway's dramas.

Q.10

Q. Who among the following wrote the following lines?
"Poetry is not a branch of authorship, it is the stuff of which one life is made. The rest is mere oblivion, a dead letter, for all that is worth remembering in life, is the poetry of it."

1) Mary Shelley
2) Charles Lamb
3) William Hazlitt
4) S.T. Coleridge
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (William Hazlitt)

These lines belong to William Hazlitt, one of the most passionate prose stylists of the Romantic era. Unlike the more whimsical Charles Lamb, Hazlitt’s criticism was intensely subjective and energetic, viewing poetry as an emotional necessity rather than just a literary category.

Q.11

Q. From which book of John Milton’s Paradise Lost is the epigraph of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein taken?

1) Book I
2) Book II
3) Book X
4) Book XII
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (Book X)

The epigraph—where Adam asks God if he requested to be molded from clay—comes from Book X of Paradise Lost. Mary Shelley uses this to draw a parallel between the Creature and Adam (and also Satan), highlighting the Creature’s existential resentment toward his creator, Victor Frankenstein.

Q.12

Q. Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams was written as a call to end:

1) The abuse of workers by the industrialists
2) The abuse of masses by the Church
3) The abuse of power by a tyrannical government
4) The abuse of tenants by the landlords
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (The abuse of power by a tyrannical government)

Written by the anarchist philosopher William Godwin, Caleb Williams (1794) is a pioneering political novel. It critiques the legal and social systems of the time, showing how the "machinery" of law and a tyrannical government can be used to destroy an innocent individual to protect the reputation of the powerful.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 5

Focus: Mary Wollstonecraft and the Foundations of Feminist Philosophy.

Q.13

Q. Which among the following texts are NOT written by Mary Wollstonecraft?
A. The Wrongs of Man
B. Vindication of the Rights of Man
C. Thoughts on the Education of Sons
D. Vindication of the Rights of Woman
E. The Wrongs of Woman

1) B and D only
2) B and E only
3) D and E only
4) A and C only
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 4 (A and C only)

This question tests your precision regarding titles. Here is the breakdown of Mary Wollstonecraft's actual bibliography:

  • B (1790): Vindication of the Rights of Men (A response to Edmund Burke).
  • D (1792): A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (Her foundational feminist text).
  • E (1798): Maria: or, The Wrongs of Woman (Her posthumous, unfinished novel).

Why A and C are incorrect:

  • A: The Wrongs of Man is a fictitious title designed to confuse you with "The Wrongs of Woman."
  • C: Her actual debut work was Thoughts on the Education of Daughters (1787), not "Sons."

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 6

Focus: Romantic Satire, Victorian Domestic Critique, and Cultural Criticism.

Q.14

Q. Who among the following wrote Plan of a Novel?

1) E.M. Forster
2) D.H. Lawrence
3) Jane Austen
4) Thomas Hardy
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (Jane Austen)

Jane Austen wrote Plan of a Novel, According to Hints from Various Quarters (1815). It is a short, humorous satire that mocks the stereotypical "perfect heroine" and the absurd plot suggestions she received from her librarian and other acquaintances. It showcases her sharp wit and refusal to conform to the sentimental novel tropes of her time.

Q.15

Q. Three satirical stories by W.M. Thackeray portraying unhappy marriage and exploitation of one partner by the other are titled as:

1) Men's Wives
2) Wives Husbands
3) Wife and Husband
4) Wife without a Husband
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 1 (Men's Wives)

William Makepeace Thackeray published Men's Wives in 1843 in Fraser's Magazine. This collection includes stories like The Ravenswing and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Berry. Thackeray uses these narratives to expose the performative nature of Victorian marriages and the often-cynical exploitation that occurred behind closed domestic doors.

Q.16

Q. Friendship's Garland (1871) is a sequel to which one of the following works by Matthew Arnold?

1) Culture and Anarchy
2) Essays in Criticism
3) On the Study of Celtic Literature
4) Literature and Dogma
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 1 (Culture and Anarchy)

Matthew Arnold's Friendship's Garland is a collection of satirical letters that serves as a sequel to Culture and Anarchy. While the latter is a formal philosophical treatise on "Sweetness and Light," the former uses the persona of a fictional Prussian, Arminius von Thunder-ten-Tronckh, to mock the "Philistinism" (materialism and lack of culture) of the English middle class.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 7

Focus: Intellectual Societies and the Intersection of Science and Religion.

Q.17

Q. Who among the following were associated with the Metaphysical Society, founded in 1869 by Sir James Knowles?
A. Robert Browning
B. T.H. Huxley
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. Matthew Arnold
E. William Gladstone

1) A, B and C only
2) B, D and E only
3) C, D and E only
4) B, C and E only
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 4 (B, C and E only)

The Metaphysical Society (1869–1880) was a unique intellectual forum designed to facilitate dialogue between the conflicting forces of the Victorian age: Religion and Science.

  • T.H. Huxley (B): Represented the scientific front; he famously coined the term "agnostic" during his time with the society.
  • Alfred Tennyson (C): Represented the poetic and spiritual inquiry into the soul and immortality.
  • William Gladstone (E): The Prime Minister, who brought political and theological weight to the debates.

Why A and D are incorrect: While Robert Browning and Matthew Arnold were giants of the era, they were not official members of this specific society. Arnold, in fact, was often skeptical of such organized debates.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 8

Focus: Detective Fiction, Modernist Novels, and Global Literary Recognition.

Q.18

Q. Sherlock Holmes, the greatest of all fictional detectives, made his first appearance in one of the following works by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle:

1) Strand Magazine
2) A Study in Scarlet
3) The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
4) The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 2 (A Study in Scarlet)

Published in 1887, A Study in Scarlet is the novel that introduced the legendary detective Sherlock Holmes and his chronicler Dr. John Watson. While the Strand Magazine later popularized the short stories starting in 1891, the true debut occurred in this novel, which established Holmes' methods of deduction and his profession as a "consulting detective."

Q.19

Q. Women in Love is a sequel to which one of the following novels by D.H. Lawrence?

1) Lady Chatterley's Lover
2) The White Peacock
3) Sons and Lovers
4) The Rainbow
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 4 (The Rainbow)

D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love (1920) serves as a sequel to The Rainbow (1915). While The Rainbow traces three generations of the Brangwen family, Women in Love continues the story of Ursula Brangwen and her sister Gudrun, delving deeper into their romantic and philosophical lives in modern society.

Q.20

Q. Which one of the following novels by E.M. Forster is about homosexual love?

1) Howards End
2) A Room with a View
3) Maurice
4) Where Angels Fear to Tread
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 3 (Maurice)

Written in 1913–1914 but published posthumously in 1971, Maurice is E.M. Forster's only novel that explicitly explores homosexual love. The story follows the emotional and sexual awakening of the protagonist, Maurice Hall, as he defies societal and legal norms to find self-acceptance.

Q.21

Q. Which one of the following statements about the Booker Prize is not correct?

1) A prestigious British award given annually to a full-length novel
2) Eligible writers shall belong to the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth countries
3) It was established in 1968 by Booker McDonald, a multinational company
4) It was established to provide a counterpart to the Prix Goncourt in France
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Correct Answer: 2 (Eligible writers shall belong to the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth countries)

This statement is no longer correct. Since 2014, the Booker Prize eligibility was expanded to include any author writing in English and published in the UK or Ireland, regardless of nationality. Regarding statement 3, the prize was established in 1968 by Booker-McConnell (a multinational company), and it was indeed conceptualized as an English-language counterpart to France's Prix Goncourt.

UGC NET English August 2024 (Shift 2) | Part 9

Focus: Global Recognition and Nobel Prize Milestones.

Q.22

Q. Match List I (Author) with List II (Nobel Prize Year):

List I (Author) List II (Nobel Prize Year)
A. Wole SoyinkaI. 1991
B. Nadine GordimerII. 1993
C. Derek WalcottIII. 2003
D. J.M. CoetzeeIV. 1986
1) A–II, B–IV, C–III, D–I
2) A–III, B–II, C–IV, D–I
3) A–IV, B–I, C–II, D–III (Closest but technically flawed)
4) A–I, B–III, C–IV, D–II
View Correct Answer & Explanation

Answer: None of the Above / Technical Error in Paper

This question contains a factual error in the options provided by the NTA. Here are the correct historical pairings:

  • A. Wole Soyinka (IV): 1986 (First African Nobelist in Literature).
  • B. Nadine Gordimer (I): 1991 (Anti-apartheid South African writer).
  • C. Derek Walcott: 1992 (The options list 1993/2003/1986/1991, none of which are correct for Walcott).
  • D. J.M. Coetzee (III): 2003 (South African-Australian novelist).

Note: Toni Morrison won in 1993, which might have been the intended "II" for the list if Walcott was replaced. For exam purposes, Option 3 is the only one that correctly matches Soyinka, Gordimer, and Coetzee.

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