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Known as the father of African literature; raised in Nigeria by Christian convert parents; prevalent theme in his work is the intersection of African tradition and modernity, especially as embodied by European colonialism; author of Arrow of God, Beware Soul Brother and Other Poems, and Things Fall Apart

Achebe

Known as the Father of Tragedy of 90 plays at the great Athenian festivals of Greek drama; wrote The Persians, The Seven Against Thebes, The Suppliants, The Oresteia, The Liberation Bearers, and The Eumenides; most famous work is Prometheus Bound, which tells the myth of the Titan punished by Zeus for giving humanity the gift of life

Aeschylus

South African postmodernist writer; influenced by his family's religious convictions and the Old Testament; best known for his first novel Cry, The Beloved Country, a tale of racial injustice that brought international attention to the problem

Alan Paton

French novelist, essayist, and playwright; awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize in Literature at 44, the second-youngest recipient in history. The Myth of Sisyphus, The Rebel. The Stranger, The Plague and The Fall.

Albert Camus

wrote his first plays in 1825 and 1826; penned Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers

Alexandre Dumas

He possessed a strong poetic power, which his readers often attributed to his "Englishness" and masculinity's His most famous works are In Memoriam, The Idylls of King and Maud, and The Charge of the Light Brigade, "Cannon to the left, Cannon to the right"

Alfred Tennyson

which dance company was founded by alvin ailey

American Dance Theater

Most famous writer of Old Comedy plays in ancient Greece and his surviving works are the only example of that style; known as the father of comedy; known for The Clouds, The Wasps, The Birds, Lysistrata, The Women at the Thesmophoria, Festival, and The Frogs.

Aristophanes

what islamic dynasty drove the last crusaders out of palestine

Ayyubid

among his major plays are the comedies Every Man in His Humor, Volpone, Epicocene, The Silent Woman, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair; major poems include Song to Celia; fought in a Dutch war against Spain

Ben Johnson

Canada's westernmost province, located within the Rocky Mountain range; only province in the Pacific Ocean; this province joined Confederation because the Canadian government agreed to pay off the colony's loans and to build a railway that would link it to the four provinces in the East of Canada; capital is Victoria

British Columbia

Dichloromethane

CH2Cl2

what opera by Bizet has the main character working in a cigarette factory

Carmen

what court case dealt with the death of robert farquhar

Chisholm vs Georgia

British author, poet, and pamphleteer best known as the author of Robinson Crusoe and Moll Flanders

Defoe

Welsh writer; writing is famous for its opaque poetic style, comic exuberance, rhapsodic lilt, and pathos; main themes of his work are nostalgia, life, death, and lost innocence; best known for the poem Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night and the play Under Milk Wood.

Dylan Thomas

Name this author of 40 books of poetry and prose, best remembered for a sequence of 200 free-verse epitaphs depicting American life spoken from a town cemetery, the Spoon River Anthology. He also wrote Silence, Alfred Moir, George Gray, A.D Blood, Fiddler Jones, Anne Rutledge, Amanda Barker, and Alexander Throckmorton.

Edgar Lee Masters

who wrote the play the faerie queen

Edmund Spenser

Who wrote Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Edward Albee

English Victorian poet who was the eldest of twelve children and wrote poetry since eleven, reputation rests chiefly upon her love poems, Sonnets from the Portuguese and Aurora Leigh and How Do I Love Thee.

Elizabeth Browning

Who wrote The Rhinoceros?

Eugene Ionesco

A playwright who wrote about 90 tragedies and included strong female characters and smart slaves; most famous works include Medeia, which cemented his reputation for clever dialogues, fine choral lyrics, and a gritty realism in both his text and stage presentation

Euripides

French literature, remembered primarily for his stylistic precision and dispassionate rendering of psychological detail in his piece Madame Bovary, wrote Sentimental Education, Salammbo, Three Tales, A Simple Heart, and Bouvard and Pecuchet,

Flabert

who composed the damnation of faust

Hector Berloiz

Who wrote Phenomenology of the Spirit?

Hegel

Who composed the opera the fairy queen

Henry Purcell

English poet and Jesuit priest during the Victorian era whose work wasn't published in collected form until 1918; known best for his manipulation of prosody, particularly his invention of sprung rhythm, and his use of imagery established him post death as an innovative writer of verse

Hopkins

One of this Norwegian author's best known plays tells the story of Gregers Werle, a young man who returns to his hometown after an extended exile and is reunited with his boyhood friend Hjalmar Ekdal; his work explored how his art could advocate for social justice and women's rights; best known plays are A Doll's House, Hedda Gabler, Peer Gynt, The Wild Duck, Brand, and Rosmersholm

Ibsen

South African novelist who won a Nobel Prize for literature about the effects of colonization; author of two fictionalized memoirs Boyhood and Youth and The Lives of Animals, Disgrace, and Waiting for the Barbarians

J.M. Coetzee

American novelist who was drafted into WWIl in 1942, where he served as an interrogator, questioning them in English and French. He had a successful and distinguished military career, landing at Utah Beach on D-Day and fighting in the Battle of the Bulge near the end of the war. His book won critical acclaim and devoted admirers, especially among the post WWII generation of college students, The Catcher in the Rye.

JD Salinger

best known for his biography of his friend and older contemporary English writer Samuel Johnson, which is commonly said to be the greatest biography in English language.

James Boswell

Author of this 1813 novel set in England, name the author of Pride and Prejudice

Jane Austen

This poet wrote with great insight and emotion about art and beauty, love and loss, suffering, and nature; most famous works are Ode on a Grecian Urn and La Belle Dame Sans Merci

John Keats

English Romantic poet and satirist who became famous for his autobiographical poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and his satirical realism of Don Juan; he lived in various parts of Italy for Greece to help the Greeks in their struggle to free themselves from Turkish rule; Calvinist; died of a fever

Lord Byron

Egyptian author and playwright known for The Cairo Trilogy, which depicts the lives of three generations of different families in Cairo from WWI until after the 1952 military coup that overthrew King Farouk; pioneered in OBGYN

Mafouz

who composed the song of the earth

Mahler

Who painted the "Fifer" and "Luncheon on the grass"?

Manet

French playwright and Elizabethan poet; known especially for his establishment of dramatic blank verse; known for saying "Here will I dwell, for heaven is on these lips, And all is dross that is not Helena" ; first play was Tamburlaine the Great; wrote 48 poems in All Ovid Elegies; known as the father of English tragedy; stabbed to death by his roommate who found "heretical papers"

Marlowe

Who painted The Red Studio?

Matisse

This author was involved in the anti-apartheid movement early on and some of her books were banned by the apartheid regime; major themes of her work were exile and alienation; won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1991; famous for her novel entitled The Conservationist

Nadine Gordimer

which dance company was founded by balanchine

New York City Ballet

This is the most populous Canadian province that borders 4 Great Lakes, where the national capital is located; capital is Toronto Alberta

Ontario

Who painted The Card Players?

Paul Cezanne

What was Jane Austen's final novel

Persuasion

Who painted The Massacre of the Innocents?

Peter Paul Rubens

who wrote the opera la traviata

Piave

who wrote book of three virtues

Pizan

who wrote the opera madame butterfly

Puccini

which artist was known for his "combines"

Rauschenberg

Who painted Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette?

Renoir

English poet and playwright whose dramatic monologues put him high among the Victorian poets. He was noted for irony, characterization, dark humor, social commentary, historical settings, and a challenging vocabulary and syntax. His most noted works were The Ring and the Book, a story of a Roman murder trial, The Pied Piper of Hamelin, and My Last Duchess. Started writing poetry at 21

Robert Browning

what islamic dynasty ruled iran from 1502-1736

Safavid

English writer who conceived the first British dictionary; his works include a verse drama, longer serious poems, several prologues, many translations, and light occasional poetry

Samuel Johnson

This poet's most famous works are The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, and Christabel, which all featured supernatural themes and exotic images, perhaps affected by the use of drugs; partnered with William Wordsworth; co-founder of Romanticism in English literature; one of the Lake poets

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

who choreographed bring in da noise bring in da funk

Savion Glover

Name this American composer and pianist that was known as the "king of ragtime" at the turn of the 20th century. He wrote a couple operas: A Guest of Honor and Treemonisha, along with classic piano music, Maple Leaf Rag and The Entertainer.

Scott Joplin

what was Jane Austen's first novel

Sense and Sensibility

This author's most notable work is Winesburg, Ohio, and in his memoir he wrote "Hands", in the opening story, which was the first "real" story he ever wrote. This writer is best known for subjective and self-revealing works.

Sherwood Anderson

Most famous for his 108 love sonnets and known as the second greatest Elizabethan sonneteer after Shakespeare; courtier, statesman, soldier, poet, and patron of scholars and poets that wrote Astrophel and Stella, The Defense of Poesy and The Countess of Pembroke's Acadia;

Sir Phillip Sydney

British novelist whose romantic vision of a feudal society made him highly popular in the South; known as the father of Scottish literature; works consisted of poetic romances such asThe Lady of the Lake, Quentin Duward, The Talisman, set in Palestine during the Crusades, The Waverley Novels

Sir Walter Scott

"Some enchanted evening" is from what musical

South Pacific

American poet, novelist, and short story writer that won the O. Henry Story Prize and two Pulitzer prizes for the posthumously-published Western Star, the first part of an epic poem based on American history. He suffered a heart attack and died at 44. He was best known for John Brown's Body, a narrative poem on the Civil War.

Stephen Vincent Bennet

which dancer was married to balanchine

Tallchief

was founded as a national theatre for Ireland by W.B. Yeats and Lady Gregory in 1904.

The Abbey Theater

The Last Day of a Condemned Man, Demain des l'cube, Toilers of the Sea, History of a Crime, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Les Miserables

Victor Hugo

Classical Roman poet best known for three major works- The Bucolics, The Georgics, and The Aeneid; regarded by Romans as their greatest poet

Virgil

His most famous works included the fictitious Lettres Philosophiques and the satirical novel Candide

Voltaire

Who wrote of the character Rip Van Winkle in Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon, and the Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Washington Irving

This poet is considered to be one of the greatest visionaries of the early Romantic era. In addition to writing such poems as "The Lamb" and "The Tyger," he was primarily occupied as an engraver and watercolor artist. Some of his most famous works is a book called Songs of Innocence and Experience, The Book of Thel, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, and Jerusalem.

William Blake

This English poet known as the father of Romantic poetry is best known for lyrical ballads co-written with Samuel Taylor Coleridge and The Prelude, an autobiographical Romantic epic poem chronicling the "growth of a poet's mind." He was also known for the poem "I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud" and "Daffodils"

Wordsworth

who wrote White Teeth

Zadie Smith

from which opera is the character nanki poo

of the Mikado


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