slemslempike: (Default)
slemslempike ([personal profile] slemslempike) wrote2005-02-04 02:05 pm
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Norton Anthology Quiz

Quiz here, taken from Bookish. Having taken all of them in a fit of boredom, I find that I am a sorry excuse for an English graduate. Some of the questions were quite easy to guess at though.

72% - Twentieth Century
64% - Victorians
66% - Romatic Period
64% - Restoration & Eighteenth Century
60% - Early 17th Century
60% - 16th Century
20% - Middle Ages

In my defense, the last category was never included in any of my courses, so it was completely guesswork.

To assuage my feelings of inadequacy, I'm going to pretend that they're being graded on an average UK university scale. Woo-hoo! Discard the lowest marked module and I get an upper second overall. (Of course, if we're grading on American terms, I failed. Not even scraping a D. Let's not grade on American terms.) It's a very American style quiz. Quite a few of the things in the questions were mentioned in passing in my literature lectures, but we weren't marked on them. All English assesment was through essay questions, 3 essays in three hours.

Go on then. Take the quiz, ace every cateogry and then post about it here to make sure I feel really dumb. Or, better yet, take it, fail even more dismally and then make me feel better!

[identity profile] coconutswirl.livejournal.com 2005-02-04 06:58 am (UTC)(link)
Middle Ages: a whopping 65 per cent. WTF?
16th Century: 57 per cent. Ack. The shame.
Early 17th C: 67 per cent
Restoration & 18th C: 70 per cent
Romantic Period: 89 per cent - again, WTF?
Victorians: 63 per cent
20th C: 93 per cent, but that was my second time taking the test so.. first time I got 75 per cent.

How did you find Bookish?

[identity profile] coconutswirl.livejournal.com 2005-02-04 06:59 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, and I took the "as many questions as possible" option.

[identity profile] slemslempike.livejournal.com 2005-02-04 07:26 am (UTC)(link)
I used to read the lj feed of the previous site, and the new address was linked to when it changed, I think. I, uh, kind of know the writer...

And how did you score that highly in Middle Ages? I can take the shame of being beaten by an acknowleged lit geek on everything, but by 45 PER CENT?

[identity profile] coconutswirl.livejournal.com 2005-02-04 07:55 am (UTC)(link)
I have no idea where the Middle English score came from. I've never studied ME lit! I have, however, watched "A Knight's Tale" a couple of times ;)

And, ah. I see. I think it has a LJ feed too.