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Page 1: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

Hosted

by

Ms. Gharda

Page 2: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

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Page 3: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

Row 1, Col 1

At the beginning of AStreetcar Named Desire, we areconfronted by Stanley’s bruteforce when he heaves thisup at Stella.

What is a hunk of meat?

Page 4: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

1,2

The wildness of this setting whereCathy and Heathcliff play becomesa symbol of her love for him.

What are the moors at Wuthering Heights?

Page 5: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

1,3

In order to make Kurtz’s mistressfeel better, Marlowe tells herKurtz’s last words were this rather than this.

What is her name rather than “The horror! The horror!”?

Page 6: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

1,4

Holden Caulfield writes a descriptive essay for Stradlaterabout this object.

What is his deceased brother Allie’s baseball mitt?

Page 7: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

1,5

What is his reflection in the mirror (“From the depths of the mirror, a corpse gazed back at me”)?

The last sight Elie Wiesel reports seeing at the end of Night.

Page 8: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

2,1

First and last name of Stella’s sister.

Who is Blanche Dubois?

Page 9: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

2,2

Macbeth’s best friend who later comes back to haunt himas a ghost.

Who is Banquo?

Page 10: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

2,3

The narrator of Heart of Darkness

Who is Marlow?

Page 11: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

2,4

In Woman Warrior, the names of the narrator’s mother and aunt illustrating how they act as foils to one another.

Who are Moon Orchid and Brave Orchid?

Page 12: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

2,5

This girl was blamed for William’s deathbefore it was discovered that the murderwas committed by the creature.

Who is Justine Moritz?

Page 13: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

3,1

Who is Mary Shelley?

Frankenstein

Page 14: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

3,2

Who is Tennessee Williams?

A Streetcar Named Desire

Page 15: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

3,3

Who is Emily Bronte?

Wuthering Heights

Page 16: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

3,4

Who is Elie Wiesel?

Night

Page 17: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

3, 5

Who is Joseph Conrad?

Heart of Darkness

Page 18: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

4,1

Iago transforms this object from being a symbol of Othello’s love forDesdemona to a sign of her infidelity with Cassio.

What is the handkerchief?

Page 19: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

4,2

What is paradox?

“Fair is foul, and foul is fair.” This device is utilized here to at first baffle the reader’s understanding, but upon exploring the conspiracies and betrayals that fill Macbeth, one realizes that the seemingly contradictory statement is true.

Page 20: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

4,3

In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.

What is asyndeton?

Page 21: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

4,4

The sonnet that has 3 quatrains and one concluding couple.

What is Elizabethan, English, or Shakespearean?

Page 22: Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Plot DetailsName that Character Literary Devices 300 200 400 200 100 500 100 Name that Author

4,5

Edgar Linton’s mild manners and gentle waysserve as a contrast to further define Heathcliffas a passionate and sometimes cruel Byronichero, making Edgar Heathcliff’s ________.

What is foil?