Loyola College B.A. English Nov 2011 Communicative Grammar Of English Question Paper PDF Download

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Transitional Literature Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5403 – TRANSITIONAL  LITERATURE

 

 

 

Date : 27-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

PART A

 

  1. Annotate or interpret the following in 50 words each: (8 x 3 = 24 marks)

 

  1. Language is mediating in my very being. And this brings us to the third aspect of language as culture.
  2. It had in it the scorpion’s sting

Without its poison.

  1. Ah he continued, yawning again,

The pains we suffer in building the nation!

  1. Then, then I packed my mystic drum

And turned away; never to beat so loud any more.

  1. English was the official vehicle and the magic formula to control elitedom.
  2. The child thinks she is wiser than

The cotton head of age.

  1. I am not angry

With the woman with whom

I share my husband.

  1. Who calls? Does someone call outside?

Bellowing winds? Wind drowns all.

 

PART B

  1. Answer any SIX of the following in 150 to 200 words each:  (6 x 6 = 36 marks)

 

  1. Describe the effect of The Mystic Drum.
  2. 10. Critically review the theme of transition in the ‘The Voices of Transition.’
  3. What is the central conflict in The Song of Lawino?
  4. How does Soyinka treat the theme of conflict in The Lion and the Jewel?
  5. How do the nation building activities of the two differ in Building the Nation?
  6. Discuss the cultural side of Snapshots of a Wedding.
  7. How does Ama Ata Aidoo feature Africa in Certain Winds from the South?
  8. How does literature help building the national identity, according to Thiongo?

 

PART C

III. Answer any FOUR of the following in 350 words each:                                     (4 x 10 = 40 marks)

 

  1. Consider the oral tradition as featured in Things Fall Apart.
  2. How does Soyinka fuse African and western traditions in The Lion and the Jewel?
  3. Analyze the African poems prescribed for your study in terms of tone, style and theme.
  4. What are the various aspects of language as enumerated by Ngugi wa Thiongo?
  5. Evaluate the features of African culture as seen from the texts of your study.
  6. How do Okot p’Bitek, Ama Ata Aidoo and Bessie Head feature womanism in their works?

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 World Classics In Translation Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5500 – WORLD CLASSICS IN TRANSLATION

 

 

 

Date : 25-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 9:00 – 12:00

 

PART – A

 

Answer the following in about 50 words each:                                                          (10×2=20)

 

  1. What is media res?
  2. What is the function of the chorus according to Horace?
  3. Name the gods who favoured Paris and Menelaus? Why were they favoured?
  4. What was Oedipus’s crime and how did he punish himself?
  5. List Horace’s views on decorum.
  6. Specify the role of the chorus in “Oedipus Rex”.
  7. Why was Oedipus rejected by his parents after his birth?
  8. Who was Horace addressing the ‘Ars Poetica’ to and in what form was it written?
  9. What happened to Berthe after the death of her parents?
  10. How did Oedipus become the child of King Polybus of Corinth?

 

PART – B

 

Answer any Four of the following in about 200 words each:                                      (4×10=40)

 

  1. Trace with suitable examples the themes in Tagore’s “Gitanjali”.
  2. Examine the character of Orogon in Moliere “Tartuffe”.
  3. Discuss the theme of love in Chekov’s “Seagull”.
  4. Analyse the comic elements in Plautus’s “The Twin Menaechmi”.
  5. Comment on Augustus’s views on God in “The Confessions” Book 1.
  6. Compare and contrast the characters of Meelaus and Paris.
  7. Sketch the character Rodolphe in “Madame Bovary”.
  8. Describe Dante’s visit to the gates of hell in “The Inferno”.

 

PART – C

 

 Answer any TWO of the following in about 300 words each:                               (2×20=40)

 

  1. Discuss Horace’s views on characterization and dramatic plot in “Ars Poetica”.
  2. What are the dramatic techniques employed by Sophocles?
  3. Describe the major Greek heroes presented by Homer in Book 3 of “The Illiad”.
  4. Illustrate the important themes in Chekov’s “ The Seagull”.
  5. “Tolstoy doesn’t explicitly moralise in the book, he allows his themes to emerge

naturally from the “vast panorama of Russian life”. Discuss.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Reading Fiction Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6601 – READING FICTION

 

 

 

Date : 18-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART  – A

 

  1. Answer any FIVE of the following in about 250 words each.        (5×8 =40 marks)

 

  1. Attempt a character analysis of
  2. Why is Sampath so distraught with his life in Shahkot?
  3. Is García Márquez’s main notion thatlovesickness is literally an illness? Substantiate.
  4. What is the significance of the title My Son’s Story?
  5. Identify the common themes in the short stories from Africa prescribed for study.
  6. Discuss how Some Other Country presents the New Zealand landscape.
  7. Examine Icelandic Folktales as containing samples from the rich folklore of Iceland.

 

PART – B

 

  1. Answer any THREE of the following in about 400 words each.      (3×20 =60 marks)
  2. Critically examine Hesse’s crafting of Siddhartha’s journey.

 

(OR)

 

The main issue Kiran Desai confronts in Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard is that

of nature versus civilization. Do you agree?

 

  1. Urbino’s function in Love in the Time of Cholera is to provide the counterpoint to

Florentino Ariza’s archaic, boldly romantic love.  Elucidate.

 

(OR)

 

How does Nadine Gordimer make it clear that she disapproves of apartheid?

 

  1. Owen Marshall’s world is a world where the individual and often the eccentric

individual, is valued above the group. Explain.

 

(OR)

(P.T.O)

 

 

Chinua Achebe’s  collection is refreshing for the inclusion of work by the wide

range of writers who have made the emerging field of African fiction something to
follow.  Comment.

 

  1. Descriptive and nuanced, Some Other Country, breathe life into a range of

endearing characters and situations. Discuss.

 

(OR)

Professor Boucher feels that ‘the age of technology may have altered the outward

character of life in Iceland beyond recognition, but the roots are still there’.

Discuss with special reference to the Icelandic Folktale.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Shakespeare Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FOURTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 4501 – SHAKESPEARE

 

 

 

Date : 24-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART – A

 

 Explain the following passages with reference to the context:                                (10×2=20)

 

  1. I, as Aeneas, our great ancestor,

Did from the flames of Troy upon his shoulder

The old Anchises bear, so from the waves of Tiber

Did I the tired Caesar.

 

  1. Our course will seem too bloody, Caius Cassius,

To cut the head off and then hack the limbs,

 

  1. Cowards die many times before their deaths;

The valiant never taste of death but once.

 

  1. Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved

Rome more

 

  1. The noble Brutus

Hath told you Caesar was ambitious:

If it were so, it was a grievous fault,

And grievously hath Caesar answer’d it

 

  1. I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano;

A stage where every man must play a part,

And mine a sad one.

 

  1. When Laban and himself were compromised

That all the eanlings which were streak’d and pied

Should fall as Jacob’s hire,

 

  1. All that glitters is not gold;

Often have you heard that told:

Many a man his life hath sold

But my outside to behold:

Gilded tombs do worms enfold.

 

  1. There are some shrewd contents in yon same paper,

That steals the colour from Bassanio’s cheek:

Some dear friend dead; else nothing in the world

Could turn so much the constitution

Of any constant man

 

  1. The quality of mercy is not strain’d,

It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven

Upon the place beneath: it is twice blest;

It blesseth him that gives and him that takes:

PART – B

 

Write paragraph answers for any FIVE of the following:                                             (5×8=40)

 

  1. Analyse the character of Cassius.
  2. Discuss how the trial scene reveals a conflict between justice and mercy.
  3. Compare the passivity of Desdemona with the other female characters of Shakespeare.
  4. How does Richard II compare with Henry Bolingbroke?
  5. Tragic heroes of Shakespeare.
  6. Role of Puck in Midsummer Night’s Dream.
  7. Write a note of the wedding scenes in Merchant of Venice and Midsummer Night’s

Dream.

 

  1. What is the significance of Caesar’s dying words – Et tu Brute?

PART – C

 

Write essays on the following questions in about 300 words each:                    (2×20=40)

 

  1. Discuss the heroines of Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night on comparison with the

heroes of the play.
(OR)

Consider Richard II as a historical play.

 

  1. Who is the true statesman in the play Julius Caesar – Caesar, Antony or Brutus? Argue.

(OR)

Make a Post-colonial analysis of the play Othello.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Literary Forms & Literary Appreciation Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIRST SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 1501 – LITERARY FORMS AND LITERARY APPRECIATION

 

 

 

Date : 02-05-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

PART – A

 

  1. Answer the following in about 50 words each: (10 x 3 = 30)

 

  1. Name the three chief types of Ode.
  2. What is Ballad?
  3. Set forth the basic difference between the Italian sonnet and the English sonnet.
  4. Give any three examples of elegy in English poetry.
  5. How is satire different from lampoon?
  6. What is tragic-comedy?
  7. How does plot vary from story?
  8. Distinguish between rising action and falling action in drama.
  9. What are the six elements of tragedy as stated by Aristotle?
  10. Name the three ideals of the French Revolution.

 

PART – B

 

  1. Answer any FIVE of the following in about 150 words: (5 x 8 = 40)

 

  1. Cull out the salient features of epic poetry.
  2. Attempt a brief note on the aesthetic movement.
  3. Post Modernism is both a continuation and a break away from Modernism – Substantiate.
  4. Elucidate the chief features of Metaphysical poetry in English.
  5. Explain point of view in novel.
  6. Explicate Aristotle’s theory of tragic hero.
  7. Analyse the important precepts advocated by the Renaissance in literature.
  8. Present an appraisal of satirical comedy.

PART – C

 

III. Answer any ONE of the following in about 250 words:                                                     (1 x 15 = 15)

 

  1. Discuss in detail the origin and outcome of the Reformation movement in England.
  2. Compare and contrast the features of the Neo-Classical movement and the Romantic revival.

 

 

PART – D

 

  1. 21. Attempt an appreciation of the following poem in 200-250 words.                   (15 marks)

 

Sonnet No. 130

 

My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun;

Coral is far more red than her lips’ red;

If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun;

If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.

I have seen roses damask’d, red and white,

But no such roses see I in her cheeks;

And in some perfumes is there more delight

Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.

I love to hear her speak, yet well I know

That music hath a far more pleasing sound;

I grant I never saw a goddess go;

My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:

And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare

As any she belied with false compare.

 

William Shakespeare

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Linguistics Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5502 – LINGUISTICS

 

 

 

Date : 30-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 9:00 – 12:00

 

PART – A

 

Answer any FIVE questions in the following in about 50 words each;

by choosing not less than two questions from each section:                                  (5 X 4 = 20 Marks)

 

SECTION – 1

  1. When is it said that a person is involved in ‘performance’?
  2. How does human language differ from animal communication?
  3. How are the English nasal sounds produced?
  4. What is stylistics?

SECTION – 2

  1. What is the traditional label given to the following words in English grammar? Why?

Sing, Sings, Sang

  1. Define ‘collocation’.
  2. What is ‘phatic communion’.
  3. Trace the difference between ‘Homophones’ and ‘homonyms’.

PART – B

 

Answer any four of the following questions in about 150 words each;

by choosing TWO from each section:                                                                     (4 X 10 = 40 Marks)

SECTION – 1

  1. How is linguistics a science?
  2. How are the English fricatives pronounced? In what way are they different from frictionless continuants?
  3. Define the terms:- Idiolect, dialect, pidgin, creole

SECTION – 2

  1. Write a note on TG grammar.
  2. Explain how English vocabulary has grown through the tendency of borrowing.
  3. Trace the psycho – social dimensions of language.

PART – C

 

Answer the following questions in about 300 words each:                                    (2 X 20 = 40 Marks)

 

  1. Select any Ten traditional concepts of grammar and bring out their inadequacies from a modern grammarian’s view point.

(OR)

Draw a three term lable for the English consonants.

  1. Trace the features of discourse analysis.

(OR)

How does stylistics play a pivotal role in the analysis of literary texts? Elaborate.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Indian Nationalist Literature Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

THIRD SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 3102 – INDIAN NATIONALIST LITERATURE

 

 

 

Date : 28-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 9:00 – 12:00

PART – A

  1. Explain with reference to context any FIVE of the following in 75 words each: 5 x 4 = 20

 

  1. Here flourish thousand castes,

But no room for foreigners.

The mother’s children may quarrel,

Yet they are brothers.

  1. Two hands are we to serve thee, O our mother,

To strive and succor, cherish and unite.

Two feet are we to cleave the waning darkness,

And gain the pathways of the dawning light.

 

  1. Mother, O Mother, wherefore dost thou sleep?

Arise and answer for thy children’s sake!

 

  1. This, this is the land that gave us

Birth and suck and the light of knowledge.

  1. I do not remember her having ever missed the chaturmas.
  2. I passed my childhood in Porbandar.

 

  1. Answer TWO of the following in 100 words each:                              2 x 5 = 10
  2. How does Bharathi reveal his respect and reverence in his poem Vande Mataram?
  3. Bring out the images used by Sarojini Naidu in her poems ‘To India’ and ‘An Anthem of Love’.
  4. Write down Gandhiji’s impressions on Harischandra and Shravana.
  5. Write down Gandhiji’s perception of child marriage, with special reference to his child marriage with Kasturibai.

 

  • Attempt an ESSAY on any TWO in 150 words each:                                             2 x 10 = 20

 

  1. What are the salient features one could see in the poems of Bharathi and Sarojini Naidu that bring out one’s patriotism?
  2. Elucidate Mahatma Gandhi’s obsession with truth with reference to his autobiography.
  3. Attempt an essay on Pandit Nehru’s love for India as exemplified in the text ‘India’s strength and Weakness.’

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part B

 

 

  1. Annotate any five of the following: (5×2=10 marks)

 

 

  1. What are you worried about grandfather? The country is in safe hands. Safer than you have seen before

 

  1. Would you believe me if I told you I have never consciously tried to go against the tenets of Islam?

 

  1. But have I really fallen so low that even you have to lie to me.

 

  1. Why do you seek him? His time had come and Bhairava called him away.

 

  1. Their lives were not given in vain. My dam is completed.

 

  1. And then comfortably forget to pay your taxes, I suppose?

 

 

 

  1. Answer any two of the following in 150 words each:                          (2×10 =20 marks)

 

  1. Analyse the character of Muhammad’s stepmother and her relationship with Muhammad.

 

  1. Is changing the capital from Delhi to Dauladabad justifiable in Tughlaq

 

 

  1. Analyse the character of Dhananjaya in Mukta dhara.

 

  • Answer any two of the following in 300 words:  (20 marks)

 

  1. Critically evaluate the strengths and the weaknesses of Muhammad in Tughlaq.

 

  1. Estimate Mukta dhara as a play of the people and for the people.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Indian Literature In English Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIRST SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 1500 – INDIAN LITERATURE IN ENGLISH

 

 

 

Date : 28-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

SECTION – A

 

Answer the following in about 50 words each:                                                      (10 x 2 = 20 marks)

 

  1. “Ho! Let us dance, let us sing

And wear saffron garments to welcome the spring.

And pluck the new buds that are blowing.”

             In what way is the persona’s mood different from the speaker of these lines?

 

  1. The trip had darkened our face,

Our deeds were neither great nor rare.

Home is where we gather grace.

            Why is home a better place to find grace than going on a pilgrimage?

 

  1. No longstanding headstone

with his full name and two dates

              Explain these lines

 

  1. I’m not asking you only for my sake but for all the Muslims who will die at the hands of Muslims if there is a war

            Is this the true intention of the speaker to stop the war? Give reasons.

 

  1. A woman in a man’s world may be considered being progressive. But a man in a woman’s world

is – pathetic

What is the line of argument here?

 

  1. “Flocks of birds have flown high and away,

A solitary drift of cloud, too, has gone wandering on,

And I sit alone with Ching – ting Peak, towering beyond.

We never grow tired of each other, the mountain and I,”

             Why does Nehru quote this poem?

 

  1. I saw something between a lizard and a crocodile, about two feet long with claws   and a scaly covering.

            What was this animal locally called? What is it called in English? What              happened to the animal?

 

  1. Girls today! How courageous you are?

            What made the speaker exclaim thus?

 

  1. “Velan, it’s raining in the hills.  I can feel it coming up under my feet, up my legs-   -” and with that he sagged down.

            Explain the significance of this line.

 

  1. Why did she call herself Rosie? She did not come from foreign land. She was just             an Indian,

            What other description does Raju give about Rosie?

 

SECTION – B

 

Answer any FIVE of the following in about 150 words each;

 choosing not more than three from either part:                                                                 (5×8=40)

 

Part – A

 

  1. What does Ratna say about Mysore School of Dance practised by Chenniamma?
  2. Pick out clues from the poem “My Grandmother’s House” that expresses a deep sense of sorrow.
  3. What relevance does Thirukural bear for a modern man?
  4. Muhammad bin Tughluq was relatively liberal and permitted Hindus and Jains to settle in Delhi.This is a historical fact about the real king. Can this be said of Karanard’sTughlaq?

 

Part B

 

  1. Make a character analysis of Tyagu.
  2. Why did Nehru enjoy the short walks that he was permitted during his

imprisonment?

  1.         How does Dr.Radhakrishnan present his views about “the divine in the human self.”
  2.    What is central theme of the poem Indian Weavers?

 

SECTION – C

 

Answer the following in about 300 words each:                                                      (2×20=40)

 

 

  1. The Guide is delightfully funny and yet extraordinarily serious at the same time. Discuss

Or

  1. S. Naipaul’s A House for Mr.Biswas examines one man’s search for his own      identity amidst

controversy. Argue.

 

  1. What do you learn about Indianess from the prescribed poems of NissimEzekiel?

Or

Discuss the social issues dealt with by Dina Mehta in her play Brides Are Not for Burning.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Indian Folklore Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5401 – INDIAN FOLKLORE

 

 

 

Date : 27-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

 

 

I.Write  short notes on  any FIVE of the following oral genres:                                               (5×4=20)

 

  1. Lullaby
  2. Villupattu
  3. Silambaatam
  4. Folk Dance
  5. Devaraatam
  6. Kavadi Aatam
  7. Folktale
  8. Bommaalaatam

 

II.Answer in paragraphs any FOUR of the following in not less than 150 words each:        (4×10=40)

 

  1. Mention some of our South Indian musical instruments and their features.
  2. Poikkal kudiraiaattam,Oyilaattam,Bommalaattam are part and parcel of our culture.Explain.
  3. Mention some of the folk songs used in tamil films?
  4. Bring out the speciality of the Veena and the Nadaswaram.
  5. What are traditional folk forms of our culture? Explain at least four of them.

 

III. Attempt essays on any Two of the following in 300-500 words each:                             (2×20=40)

 

  1. Discuss some of the temple festivals in Tamilnadu incorporated in folksongs and folkdances.
  2. Write a folk tale from your memory and explain its theme.

Folk songs which are most common in Tamil Literature.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 History Of English Literature Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6600 – HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE

 

 

Date : 16-04-2012                         Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART – A

 

  1. Identify the following writers by relating them to:    (10 × 2 = 20)
  2. Literary school and movement
  3. The chief literary form promoted
  4. Contemporary writers
  5. Any significant historical/social/political/ideological event. Your answer should not exceed 30 words.

 

 

  1. Spenser
  2. Earl of Surrey
  3. Andrew Marvell
  4. Alexander Pope
  5. John Bunyan
  6. Keats
  7. Tennyson
  8. Ruskin
  9. Hardy
  1. Hemingway

 

PART – B

 

  1. Answer any FIVE of the following in about 150 words each: (5 × 7 = 35)

 

  1. Identify the main literary events in the Age of Chaucer.
  2. Write a note on the University Wits.
  3. Discuss the Reformation movement.
  4. Bring out the major aspects of Restoration Drama.
  5. Consider the Dramatic monologue as a literary form.
  6. Evaluate Bernard Shaw as a major dramatist.
  7. Show how Science Fiction is becoming a major trend in literature.

 

  1. Describe the characteristic traits of American Poetry.

 

 

PART – C

 

  • Answer any THREE of the following in about 250 words each:
  • × 15 = 45)
  1. Trace the impact of Renaissance on English Literature.
  2. Attempt an evaluation of Metaphysical poetry.

 

  • Examine in detail the Periodical Essay and its growth.
  • Make an assessment of the contribution of Charles Dickens to

British fiction.

 

  • Consider Eugene O’Neill and Tennessee Williams as major American

dramatists.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 History Of Art & Architecture Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A., B.Sc., DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH & VISCOM

FOURTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

HT 4206 / 4202 – HISTORY OF ART & ARCHITECTURE

 

 

 

Date : 19-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

 

PART – A

 

Answer any TEN of the following in about FIVE lines each:                                      (10×2=20 marks)

 

  1. Dancing Girl
  2. Stambhas at Rampurva
  3. Viharas
  4. Kailasanatha Temple
  5. Shore Temple
  6. Maurya Sculpture
  7. Qutb Minar
  8. Ajanta Painting
  9. Gandhara Sculpture
  10. Sher-Gil
  11. The Sphinx
  12. Colosseum

PART – B

 

Answer any FOUR of the following in about ONE page each:                                    (4×10=40 marks)

 

  1. Trace the development of the Stupa.
  2. Explain the parts of an Islamic Tomb.
  3. Bring out the special features of Modern Indian Paintings.
  4. Write a note on the Architecture of the Pandyas.
  5. Greek Architecture was splendid. Elaborate.
  6. Estimate the contribution of Cholas to Architecture.

PART – C

 

Answer any TWO of the following in FOUR pages each:                                                     (2×20=40 marks)

 

  1. Evaluate the contribution of the Indus Culture to Architecture, Sculpture and Minor Arts.
  2. Describe the various features of Orissan Architecture with examples.
  3. What are the features of Mughal Paintings? Give examples.

Assess the contribution of Romans to Art

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Gender Studies Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

THIRD SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 3501 – GENDER STUDIES

 

 

 

Date : 26-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 9:00 – 12:00

 

PART – A

 

Answer any SIX of the following in about 250 words each:                                       (6×10 =60 marks)

 

  1. Account for the achievements of the first and second wave feminism.
  2. Define feminism? Critically examine the challenges faced by feminist movements.
  3. How does stereotyping contribute to women’s oppression?
  4. Trace the major influences in Indian women’s movement.
  5. Compare and contrast liberal and radical feminism.
  6. Discuss the ideology of Marxist feminism.
  7. Cyber feminism has become a significant field in contemporary cultural practice.
  8. Write a short essay on the various aspects of Post – feminism

 

PART – B

 

Answer any TWO of the following in about 250 words each:                              (2×10 =20 marks)

 

  1. Comment on Kamala Das’s attitude towards patriarchal society in “Introduction”.
  2. Search for female identity is the central theme in Adrienne Rich’s poem. Substantiate.
  3. Giovanni’spoems record the life struggles of being a black woman. Do you agree?

PART – C

 

Answer any ONE of the following in about 400 – 500 words each:                      (1×20 =20 marks)

 

  1. Enumerate the key tenets of feminist theories.
  2. How do feminists redefine womanhood?
  3. Critically examine the woman’s experience in the following extract from Taslima Nasrin’s poem “Happy Marriage”

 

He wanted my heart under his control
so that I would love him:
in my lonely house at night,
sleepless, full of anxiety,
clutching at the window grille,
I would wait for him and sob,
My tears rolling down, I would bake homemade bread;
so that I would drink, as if they were ambrosia,
the filthy liquids of his polygynous body.
So that, loving him, I would melt like wax,
not turning my yees toward any other man,
I would give proof of my chastity all my life.
So that, loving him
on some moonlit night I would commit suicide
in a fit of ecstasy.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 English For Effective Communication Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6603 – ENGLISH FOR EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION

 

 

 

Date : 18-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

Answer ALL the questions briefly:                                                (10 x 2= 20 marks)

 

  1. Discuss very briefly TWO definitions of ‘communication.’
  2. Discuss TWO important features of ‘effective communication.’
  3. Discuss TWO important features of the different channels of communication.
  4. Comment on TWO important barriers to effective communication.
  5. Explain the term ‘kinesics’
  6. When are telephone interviews relevant?
  7. Why is body language important for effective communication?
  8. Discuss the importance of humour in effective communication.
  9. Explain the importance of any TWO modern means of communication.
  10. Explain any TWO important features of teleconferencing.

 

Answer any FOUR of the following:                               (4 x 10 = 40 marks)

 

  1. What are the advantages and disadvantages of a telephonic interview?
  2. Explain the significance of video conferencing.
  3. How can one project himself positively during a job interview?
  4. What are some of the important differences between oral and written

communication?

  1. How does culture interfere with effective communication?

 

Answer the following in about 300 words each:              (2 x 20 = 40 marks)

 

  1. Write an essay on the positive and negative features of non-verbal communication.

(or)

 

Enumerate the barriers to effective communication and propose how communication can be made more effective.

 

  1. Write an essay elaborating the advantages of written communication over oral communication.

(or)

 

What are the objectives of a Group Discussion?  What must one do to improve his/her performance in a Group Discussion?

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 English For Career Exams Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6604 – ENGLISH FOR CAREER EXAMS

 

 

 

Date : 20-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

 

I  Choose the word which is nearest in meaning to the key word:                                   (10×1=10)

 

A                     B                     C                     D

  1. Penchant disability         like                  eagerness         dislike
  2. Incensed incited             affected           encouraged      inspired
  3. Fiasco strength           success                        failure              hope
  4. Myriad bright               imaginary        great number   variety
  5. Helm edge                head                handle             corner
  6. Nascent initial               unpleasant       latest                crude
  7. Attrition attraction         suffering          decline             friction
  8. Incessant irritated           overflowing     extreme           co-operative
  9. Prowess understanding keenness          eagerness         bravery
  10. Expertise experience       skill                  smartness         art of expressing

 

II Pick out the word opposite in meaning to the key word:                                              (10×1=10)

 

A                     B                     C                     D

  1. Genuine rotten bogus               unsound          impure
  2. Dull pale wise                 shining             colorful
  3. Unruly curious obedient          intelligent        indifferent
  4. Outwit laugh victory             defeat              win
  5. Transparent translucent vague               blind                opaque
  6. Urban rustic rural                 civil                 domestic
  7. Wealthy wicked famous                        ill                     poor
  8. Mundane excellent superior           heavenly          extraordinary
  9. Copious plentiful little                 different          abundant
  10. Prim formal prior                 informal           private

 

III Out of the given alternatives, choose the one which can be substituted  for the given phrase or sentence:                                                                                                 (10×1=10)

 

A                     B                     C                     D

  1. A thing kept

  in memory of

  a person               memento         epitaph                        elegy                gift

  1. Physical features

      of an area             geography       sociology         contour            topography

  1. A plant or animal

      living on another parasite            hydra               creeper             bush

  1. A place for

      keeping bees         aviary              apiary              cage                 nest

  1. One who lives

      among strangers recluse             alien                 stoic                 rustic

  1. A person who

      opposes another   soldier             fighter             antagonist        prophet

  1. A job without

      salary                    free service      honorary          voluntary         amateur

  1. The story of

      a man written

      by himself             biography        autobiography life history       history

 

  1. A book written

      by hand                handwritten     manuscript       edition             draft

  1. That which

      cannot be heard   inaudible         audible                        unheard           ineffaceable

 

IV Choose the exact meaning of the idioms/phrases:                                                         (10×1=10)

 

A                     B                     C                     D

  1. All at Sea out of reach     very happy      puzzled            drowning
  2. Above board simple decent             open                friendly
  3. Leaps and boundsirregularly gradually rapidly             systematically
  4. 34. Let on reveal               quarrel             give                 fight
  5. In a jiffy suddenly outstanding     in a fix             appropriate
  6. Make up get about         leave                reveal               reconcile
  7. Stem from ruin originate          induce                         kill
  8. Of his own accordforcibly helplessly half-heartedly  willingly
  9. In a jam bad in trouble         hindrance        eatable
  10. To get at to reach           to advance       to proceed       to escape

 

V  Fill in the blanks with the appropriate word or phrase:                                              (10x 1=10)

In all compositions..1.. is the most..2.. virtue. You should write in a simple and..3.. manner. The words chosen should be..4.. in meaning. Try not to use..5..words merely because they are..6..Do not allow poetic images or..7..to spoil the grace of good style.It is no longer..8..to stuff your composition with too many ..9..or proverbs especially if their relevance is..10..

 

                        A                     B                     C                     D

  1. complexity flourish            simplicity         reserve
  2. hidden described         depicted          admired
  3. straightforward showy              ornate              decorative
  4. haphazard quick               discriminating clear
  5. difficult short                appropriate      small
  6. familiar literary             distant             admired
  7. pictures stories              similes             examples
  8. disliked uncommon      difficult           fashionable
  9. philosophies writers             quotations       systems
  10. good observed          clear                 doubtful

 

 

VI        SPOTTING ERROR                                                                                               (10×1=10)

In this question, a number of sentences are given. The sentences are in three separate parts and each one is called (A), (B) and (C). Read each sentence to find out whether there is an error in any part. No sentence has more than one error. When you find an error in any one of the parts (A), (B) or (C), indicate your response. If you feel there is no error in a sentence then write (D) to signify ‘No error’.

  1. In no case (A) we can measure the learner’s achievement by a single test (B) / however skillfully designed. (C) / No error. (D)
  2. His radical proposals for reform faced a lot of opposition and (A) / high handed dealings produced so much hostility (B) / that the whole project was killed in the bud. (C) / No error. (D)
  3. No sooner did the thief see the policemen (A) / that he jumped over the wall, (B) / and ran away as fast as his legs could carry him. (C) / No error. (D)
  4. His circumstance (A) / did not allow him to continue his studies (B) / when he was young. (C) / No error. (D)
  5. The minister was (A) / pleased being invited to inaugurate (B) / the world conference of religious leaders. (C) / No error. (D)
  6. The teacher asked him to write the answer ten times, (A) / as he has again committed mistakes in answering it, (B) / in spite of repeated corrections. (C) / No error. (D)
  7. It never occurred to me (A) / that I should have sent my application (B) / through the proper channel. (C) / No error. (D)
  8. I am one of those (A) / that cannot describe (B) / what I have not seen. (C) / No error.  (D)
  9. Before men came, there were only animals; (A) / and before the animals, there was a time when (B) / no kind of life existed on the earth. (C) / No error. (D)
  10. The students who were involved in communal disturbances (A) / were asked to leave the hostel (B) / with bag and baggage. (C) / No error. (D)

VII      Read the passages carefully and choose the best answer to each question out of the four alternatives.                                                                                                                                  (10×1=10)

Passage – I

One of the most mysterious, best preserved, least known and most remarkable archaeological spectacles in the world is the immense complex of geometrical symbols, giant ground-drawings of birds and animals, and hundreds of long, ruler-straight lines, some right across mountains, which stretch over 1200 square miles of the tablelands at Nazca. It was first revealed to modern eyes in 1926 when three explorers looked down on the desert from a hillside at dusk and briefly saw a Nazca line highlighted by the low slanting rays of the sun. But it was not until the Peruvian Air force took aerial photographs in the 1940s that the full magnificence of the panorama was apparent. It was as if a dozen deserted airports were spread out across the plains. Hundreds of what looked like ‘landing strips’ for aircraft were revealed. Among the many abstract patterns were a giant spider, a monkey, a shark, reptiles and flowers, all drawn on the ground on a huge scale.

  1. The ‘remarkable archaeological spectacles’ described in the passage are
  2. a) geometrical symbols b) huge ground drawings
  3. c) Nazca tablelands d) deserted airports.
  4. The initial view of the spectacle was not clear because
  5. a) it was seen from a hill side b) it was seen from aircrafts
  6. c) it was seen in the evening d) it was offset by rays of the sun
  7. The aerial photographs
  8. a) failed to reveal anything significant about the spectacle
  9. b) revealed a distorted view of the spectacle
  10. c) revealed as much as was already known about the spectacle
  11. d) revealed the full magnificence of the spectacle
  12. In the passage, the spectacle has been compared with
  13. a) out of use airports b) animals and flowers
  14. c) table lands d) hills and mountains
  15. The spectacle presented abstract images of
  16. a) human beings b) hills and mountains
  17. c) landing strips d) birds, animals and flowers

Passage – II

At a time when we are enjoying longer, more healthful lives, ominous headlines announce: ‘Researchers Tie Aluminium to Alzheimer’s Disease’ and ‘Coffee Linked to Cholestrol Rise’. As a result of alarming and sometimes ambiguous bulletins, minor health worries often become manor threats, and speculations about disease prevention become ‘proven’ cures. Part of the problem is that the media often trumpet questionable research findings as major medical breakthroughs. In 1985, three French scientists told reporters at a press conference that the drug Cyclosporine appeared to halt the growth of the AIDS virus. They based the announcement on their observation of two AIDS patients treated for eight days. Never mind that no actual study had been done; for the media, the announcement was enough, and the story became front-page news around the world. Unfortunately, one of the patients died within days, Cyclosporine was no miracle cure.

  1. According to the writer, a lot of present day medical research is
  2. a) sound and dependable b) utterly unconvincing
  3. c) of questionable merit d) of no value at all
  4. The undue publicity given to such research
  5. a) has no impact on people’s lives in general
  6. b) adds to people’s worries and gives them false hopes
  7. c) fills people’s lives with death and destruction
  8. d) makes people aware of the diseases
  9. The role of the media has been
  10. a) to make people aware of possible health hazards
  11. b) to give publicity to questionable research findings
  12. c) to dispel people’s fears about unknown diseases
  13. d) to report major medical discoveries
  14. According to some of the research findings, coffee is responsible for the rise in
  15. a) Cyclosporine b) Alzheimer’s disease
  16. c) AIDS d) Cholesterol level
  17. The drug Cyclosporine was reported
  18. a) as a treatment for AIDS
  19. b) as having no effect on the treatment of AIDS
  20. c) as accelerating the growth of AIDS
  21. d) as being responsible for the death of two AIDS patients.

VIII Write a précis of the following passage.                                                                     (10 marks)

When you sit in our local cinema enjoying the film that is flashing on the screen in front of you, do you ever think of how films are made? Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people may have spent a year or even longer, working very hard to produce a film which lasts a mere hour or two. Film making is nowadays a very big and complicated industry, involving large sums of money and occupying many hundreds of skilled technicians as well as actors and actresses. What happens when a film company decides to shoot a film? There must, of course, be a story. This may be based on a novel or a play, or it may be specially written for the film. From the story, whatever it is, a shooting script has to be prepared, which shows all the scenes, the order in which they are to be photographed or shot, the way the actors are to speak and move, the position of the cameras for each scene, and so on. Then the producer and a director are appointed. The producer engages the actors and actresses, decides which scenes are to be taken in the studio and which outside or on ‘location’, and makes all the preliminary preparations. The director is the man who tells the actors what to do, and shows them how to act each scene. It is his job to interpret the script and translate the author’s words and instructions into a series of living scenes.

IX Write an essay in about 400 words.                                                                               (20 marks)

  1. The threat of nuclear weapons maintains world peace. Nuclear power provides cheap and clean energy. The benefits of nuclear technology far overweigh the disadvantages. Do you agree or disagree? Give reasons for your answer.

(OR)

  1. b) Education is recognized as vital to the future of any society in today’s world. Governments throughout the world should make education compulsory for all children between the ages of 5 and 15. To what extent do you agree or disagree with this statement?

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 El 4500 Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FOURTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 4500 – NEW LITERATURES(AUSTRALIAN AND CANADIAN)

 

 

 

Date : 21-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART A

 

  1. Answer the following questions in about 75 words each.                            (5×2=10)

 

  1. Acres of suburbs watching the telly. You bore me. Freckle silly children. You nothing much.

Why is the author bored?

  1. Love whose unmerciful blade has pierced us through,

We struggle naked from our death in search of you,

Who do the ‘We’ and ‘you’ refer to?

  1. And I will sing to the barren rock
    Your difficult, lonely music, heart,
    Like an old proud king in a parable.

Why will the poet sing to the “Barren rock”?

  1. Crags that are black and wet out of the grey lake looming,
    Under the sunset’s flush and the pallid, faint glimmer of dawn;
  2. Where are the braves, the faces like autumn fruit,
    who stared at the child from the coloured frontispiece?

 

  1. Answer any TWO of the following in about 150 words each: (2×10=20)

 

  1. Write a note on how AJM Smith critiques modern civilization in “Like an Old Proud King”.
  2. “The novel, grappling with notions of national and gendered identity, anticipated rising concerns

about conservation and preservation and the emergence of Canadian nationalism. Discuss with

reference to Margaret Atwood’s “Surfacing”.

  1. Analyse the theme in Les Murray’s poem “The Quality of Sprawl”.

 

III. Answer any ONE of the following questions in about 300 words.                             (1×20=20)

 

  1. Comment on the search for identity as a theme in Jessica Anderson’s “Tirra Lirra by the River”.
  2. How does Margaret Atwood’s “Surfacing” capture the emptiness of modern life?

 

PART – B

 

  1. Answer any Five of the following in not more than 150 – 200 words each. (5×6=30)

 

  1. Analyze critically the short story “The Man of Slow Feeling” by Michael Wilding.
  2. Discuss Stephen Leacock’s merits as a short story writer.
  3. How are relationships in modern society portrayed in Ray Lawler’s “Summer of the Seventeenth

Doll”?

  1. What are some of the common concerns of Commonwealth writers?
  2. Justify the title “The Chosen Vessel” in Barbara Baynton’s short story.
  3. What features of science fiction are present in Michael Wilding’s “The Man of Slow Feelings”?
  4. Attempt a critical evaluation of Alice Munroe’s “Providence”.

 

PART – C

 

  1. Answer any TWO of the following in not more than 300 words each: (2×10=20)

 

  1. Comment on the title of Ray Lawler’s “Summer of the Seventeenth Doll”.
  2. How does George Ryga portray the life of the aborigines in “Ecstacy of Rita Joe”?

20. Comment on the style of Henry Lawson as a writer with examples.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Dynamics Of Oral Communication Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5404 – DYNAMICS OF ORAL COMMUNICATION

( 2 Hours only)

 

Date : 30-04-2012              Dept. No.                                          Max. : 50 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 3:00

 

Answer any TEN of the following in about 150 words each:                                           (10×5=50)

 

  1. What are the strategies and techniques that are involved in oral communication?
  2. Mention the basic elements of communication and the process of sending and receiving of messages.
  3. Explicate the purpose and the outcome of the Interpersonal communication.
  4. Write a short note on one-way communication with a relevant example.
  5. Highlight the significance and role of active listening in group discussion.
  6. Point out the uses of dyadic communication.
  7. Give an account on the essential techniques to be adopted in order to improve the presentation skills of a performer.
  8. Enumerate the essential characteristics to be accomplished and executed for a successful performance in job interviews.
  9. Explain the importance of non-verbal gestures and its salient features to gain the attention of the audience.
  10. Elucidate the skills and the duties of the discussion leaders in small group discussion.
  11. Define the following terms:
  12. Interpersonal communication
  13. Metacommunication
  • Group worthiness
  1. Cohesiveness
  2. Consensus

 

  1. “Facebook world contributes peril and depression”. Make your appeals and arguments on this topic for discussion.
  2. Draft a speech on the topic, “The transitions required in the system of education in India”.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Critical Theories Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6602 – CREATIVE WRITING

 

 

 

Date : 20-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART – I

 

Answer any EIGHT of the following in about 100 words each:                     (8 × 5 = 40 marks)

 

  1. Define imaginative writing.
  2. What is creative impulse?
  3. Explain the following literary devices with examples:
  1. i) Parable ii) Pathetic Fallacy.

 

  1. Define the following terms:
  1. i) Metaphor    ii) Paradox.
  1. Compare and contrast creative writing and technical writing.
  2. Briefly discuss the story structure.
  3. Illustrate the use of the point of view as a technique.
  4. Show the importance of dialogue in a work of fiction.
  5. Setting and atmosphere are crucial elements in a narrative. Discuss.
  6. Explain the meaning of the writers’ domain.
  7. What are the various aspects involved in sketching the plot?

 

PART – II

 

Answer any FIVE of the following in not more than 250 words each:       (5 × 12 = 60 marks)

 

  1. Attempt a character sketch of your neighbour.
  2. Using the ‘memory exploration’ technique, narrate how you met your best friend.
  3. Make the rhythm of your subject and a distinctive prose style prominent as you describe:
  1. a) an interesting travel experience OR
  2. b) a shopping experience that you enjoyed.

 

  1. “The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say”. Show how creative writing is a combination of experience, observation and imagination expressed in an innovate form.

 

  1. Write a creative poem/short story/essay beginning with the line: I was overjoyed….
  2. In your own words, describe the creative process.
  3. Examination time: Using at least 10 exchanges between two friends, describe a typical examination day at college capturing the mood of the students.
  4. In light of the creative writing principles you have learnt, examine a novel of your choice and attempt to retrace the writer’s creative craft.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Creative Writing Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

SIXTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 6602 – CREATIVE WRITING

 

 

 

Date : 20-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 1:00 – 4:00

 

PART – I

 

Answer any EIGHT of the following in about 100 words each:                     (8 × 5 = 40 marks)

 

  1. Define imaginative writing.
  2. What is creative impulse?
  3. Explain the following literary devices with examples:
  1. i) Parable ii) Pathetic Fallacy.

 

  1. Define the following terms:
  1. i) Metaphor    ii) Paradox.
  1. Compare and contrast creative writing and technical writing.
  2. Briefly discuss the story structure.
  3. Illustrate the use of the point of view as a technique.
  4. Show the importance of dialogue in a work of fiction.
  5. Setting and atmosphere are crucial elements in a narrative. Discuss.
  6. Explain the meaning of the writers’ domain.
  7. What are the various aspects involved in sketching the plot?

 

PART – II

 

Answer any FIVE of the following in not more than 250 words each:       (5 × 12 = 60 marks)

 

  1. Attempt a character sketch of your neighbour.
  2. Using the ‘memory exploration’ technique, narrate how you met your best friend.
  3. Make the rhythm of your subject and a distinctive prose style prominent as you describe:
  1. a) an interesting travel experience OR
  2. b) a shopping experience that you enjoyed.

 

  1. “The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say”. Show how creative writing is a combination of experience, observation and imagination expressed in an innovate form.

 

  1. Write a creative poem/short story/essay beginning with the line: I was overjoyed….
  2. In your own words, describe the creative process.
  3. Examination time: Using at least 10 exchanges between two friends, describe a typical examination day at college capturing the mood of the students.
  4. In light of the creative writing principles you have learnt, examine a novel of your choice and attempt to retrace the writer’s creative craft.

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Loyola College B.A. English April 2012 Contemporary British Literature Question Paper PDF Download

LOYOLA COLLEGE (AUTONOMOUS), CHENNAI – 600 034

B.A. DEGREE EXAMINATION – ENGLISH LITERATURE

FIFTH SEMESTER – APRIL 2012

EL 5501 – CONTEMPORARY BRITISH LITERATURE

 

 

 

Date : 27-04-2012              Dept. No.                                        Max. : 100 Marks

Time : 9:00 – 12:00

 

PART – A

 

Answer the following questions in about 30 words each:                                (10×2=20 marks)

 

  1. Terrifying are the attend sleek thrushes on the lawn,

More coiled steel than living

Explain the above lines.

 

  1. On motorcycles, up the road, they come:

Small, black, as flies hanging in the heat

capture the restlessness of the motorcycle riders.

 

  1. And girls in slack remember Dad.

Comment on the tone of the poem.

 

  1. He watches the hearts of things

And does not move or speak.

Explain the context in which Geoffrey Hill utters these words.

 

  1. Death is the least we have to fear.

Bring out the irony in this line.

 

  1. The superiority of one race to another is hardly ever believed in for any good reason.

Write down Russell’s opinion about racial superiority.

 

  1. Man’s knowledge of god is due to god himself.

Explain this statement of Barclay.

 

  1. “I’ve had dinner with the best”.

What light does this line throw on the character of Davies?

 

  1. The world at the present day stands in need of two kinds of things.

What, according to Russell, are the too things the world requires at present?

 

  1. All afternoon through the tall heat that slept

For miles inland,

A slow and topping curve southwards we kept.

Explain the context.

 

PART – B

 

Answer any FIVE of the following in 150 words each:                                       (5×8=40 marks)

 

  1. Attempt a critical appreciation of Ted Hughe’s “The Jaguar”.

 

  1. Critically analyse Peter Porter’s “your Attention Please”.

 

  1. Consider “Old Woman” a typical Elizabeth Jennings poem.

 

  1. What, according to Russelll, are the ideas that have harmed mankind?

 

  1. What is Barclay’s justification for his belief in God?

 

  1. Comment on the title of Pinter’s drama “The Care Taker”.

 

  1. Write short notes on the symposium in Iris Mardah’s “The Bell”.

 

  1. Write short notes on the setting of “Lord of the flies”.

 

PART – C

 

 Answer the following in about 300 words each:                                          (2 x 20 = 40 marks)

 

  1. Write an essay on 20th century poetry with special reference to the poems prescribed.

(OR)

  1. Consider Pinter’s “The Care Taker” an absurd drama.

 

  1. What does Russell advocate for a better world?

(OR)

  1. Bring out the allegory in “Lord of the Flies”.

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