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UGC-NET PYQs
Noam Chomsky
1. Noam Chomsky is known for his
2. Which of the following are books by Noam Chomsky?
(a) Syntactic Structures
(b) Verbal Learning and Verbal Behaviour
(c) Language and Society
(d) Aspects of the Theory of Syntax
(e) The pragmatics of Politeness
(b) Verbal Learning and Verbal Behaviour
(c) Language and Society
(d) Aspects of the Theory of Syntax
(e) The pragmatics of Politeness
Mikhail Bakhtin
3. Which two of the following essays form part of Mikhail Bakhtin’s “The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays”?
(a) “From the History of Novelistic Discourse”
(b) “Discourse in the Novel”
(c) “Romance and Novel”
(d) “Forms of Time and the Chronotope in the Novel”
(b) “Discourse in the Novel”
(c) “Romance and Novel”
(d) “Forms of Time and the Chronotope in the Novel”
4. Which of the following are applicable to the term ‘Carnival’?
[A] It became important through the work of the Russian theorist Mikhail Bakhtin.
[B] It means the way in which popular humour subverts official authority in classical, medieval and renaissance texts and culture.
[C] It overturns the established hierarchy and sets up a popular and democratic counterculture.
[D] It brings out the serious elements in literature.
[E] It is used as a critical tool for interpretation of poetry.
[B] It means the way in which popular humour subverts official authority in classical, medieval and renaissance texts and culture.
[C] It overturns the established hierarchy and sets up a popular and democratic counterculture.
[D] It brings out the serious elements in literature.
[E] It is used as a critical tool for interpretation of poetry.
5. Which among the following are written by Mikhail Bakhtin?
A) White Mythology
B) Freudianism: A Marxist Critique
C) The Ideology of the Aesthetics
D) Rabelais and His World
E) Morphology of the Folktale
B) Freudianism: A Marxist Critique
C) The Ideology of the Aesthetics
D) Rabelais and His World
E) Morphology of the Folktale
6. Match List – I with List – II.
List – I (Term) List – II (Coined by)
(A) Heteroglossia (I) William Empson(B) Structures of Feeling (II) Raymond Williams
(C) Ambiguity (III) Mikhail Bakhtin
(D) Discourse (IV) Michel Foucault
7. The essay “Discourse in the Novel” discusses that the novel is constituted by a multiplicity of divergent and contending social voices. Who is the author of this essay?
Michel Foucault
8. Arrange the following terms in the chronological order as these appeared in literary theory:
(a) Phallogocentrism
(b) Locutionary Act
(c) Interpellation
(d) Interpretive community
(b) Locutionary Act
(c) Interpellation
(d) Interpretive community
9. Which of the following narrative cycles is referred to in Michel Foucault’s “What is an Author”?
10. Given below are two statements:
Statement I: According to Michel Foucault, the French revolution created grounds for the birth of ‘the clinic’.
Statement II: Foucault mentions that the doctors started caring for the body of the patients the way priests cared for the soul of the sinners.
Statement II: Foucault mentions that the doctors started caring for the body of the patients the way priests cared for the soul of the sinners.
11. Choose the correct chronological sequence in which the following texts were published:
A) Madness and Civilization
B) The Archaeology of Knowledge
C) The Language of the Self: The Function of Language in Psychoanalysis
D) The Birth of the Clinic
E) Culture and Anarchy
B) The Archaeology of Knowledge
C) The Language of the Self: The Function of Language in Psychoanalysis
D) The Birth of the Clinic
E) Culture and Anarchy
12. ‘Panopticism’ is a concept that refers to external spying. Who among the following coined this term?
13. Arrange the following in the chronological order of the dates of publication:
(A) Michel Foucault’s The Order of Things
(B) M.K. Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj or The Indian Home rule
(C) Stephen Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the World Became Modern
(D) Donna Haraway’s When Species Meet
(E) Tony Bennett’s Formalism and Marxism
(B) M.K. Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj or The Indian Home rule
(C) Stephen Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the World Became Modern
(D) Donna Haraway’s When Species Meet
(E) Tony Bennett’s Formalism and Marxism
