Kendall Demirjian
Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in
each of the black spaces below before clicking
on it to display the answer.
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Chaucer | English Period-tales of knights and lords, religious themes
England
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Machiavelli | The Renaissance-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives; lyric poetry, drama, social commentary
England
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Shakespeare | The Renaissance-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives; lyric poetry, drama, social commentary
England
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Cervantes | The Renaissance-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives; lyric poetry, drama, social commentary
England
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John Milton | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Sir Isaac Newton | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Daniel Defoe | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Jonathan Swift | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Samuel Richardson | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Henry Fielding | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Gray | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Ben Johnson | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Lawrence Stern | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Oliver Goldsmith | Neoclassical-fixed form poetry, political style with flowery language, travel writing
England
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Ben Franklin | Colonial America-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives
America
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Thomas Paine | Colonial America-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives
America
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Noah Webster | Colonial America-religious, historical writing, letters, personal narratives
America
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William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
England
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Jane Austen | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
England
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Mary Shelly | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
England
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Lord Byron | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
England
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Sir Walter Scoot | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
England
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Edgar Allen Poe | Romantic-nature writing and freedom of imagination
America
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Ralph Waldo Emerson | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Charles Dickens | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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Nathaniel Hawthorne | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Robert Browning | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Edgar Allen Poe | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Emily Bronte | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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Charlotte Bronte | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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William Thackeray | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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Charles Dickens | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Nathaniel Hawthorne | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Herman Melville | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Harriet Beecher Stowe | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Henry David Thoreau | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Walt Witman | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
America
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Charles Darwin | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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George Eliot | Early Victorian-gothic horror, idealism and spiritual uplift
England
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Karl Marx | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Louisa May Alcott | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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George Eliot(Mary Ann Evens) | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Thomas Hardy | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
England
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Mark Twain | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Henry James | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Henrik Ibsen | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Robert Louis Stevenson | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
England
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Mark Twain | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Thomas Hardy | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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George Bernard Shaw | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Oscar Wilde | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Stephen Crane | Realistic Period-social stories without the obvious presence of the author
America
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Theodore Dreiser | Naturalistic and symbolistic
America
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Jack London | Naturalistic and symbolistic
America
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Joseph Conrad | Edwardian
America
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Edith Wharton | Edwardian
America
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John Millington Synge | Edwardian
Irish(other)
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D.H. Lawrence | Edwardian
England
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Willa Cather | Edwardian
America
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T.S. Eliot | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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Aldous Huxley | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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James Joyce | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
Irish(other)
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T.S. Eliot | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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E.M. Foster | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
English
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Virginia Woolf | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
English
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T.E Lawrence | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
Englis
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Earnest Hemingway | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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William Faulkner | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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W.B. Yeats | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
Irish(other)
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John Steinbeck | First World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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James Joyce | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
Irish (other)
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Richard Wright | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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George Orwell | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
English
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Arthur Miller | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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J.D. Salinger | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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Samuel Beckett | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
Irish(other)
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Vladmir Nabokov | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
English
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Jack Kerouac | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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Chinua Achebe | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
African American(other)
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Iris Murdock | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
English
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Theodore Roethke | Second World War-experimental, unique voices, youth culture and progress
America
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Sylvia Plath | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
America
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Maya Angelou | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
African American(other)
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Alice Walker | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
African American(other)
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Raymond Carver | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
America
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Toni Morrison | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
African American(other)
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Amy Tan | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
Chinese American(other)
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Thomas Pynchon | Postmodernist-anti-heros, media culture, humorous irony, social conflict
America
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You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
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kendallanne
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