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Answer: Both B and C are broadly correct in literary contexts
Personification gives human traits to abstract ideas or objects (e.g., 'the wind whispered'). Anthropomorphism makes animals or objects behave literally like humans (e.g., Animal Farm).
Answer: Metonymy
Metonymy replaces the name of a thing with the name of something closely associated with it. The crown is a physical object associated with royal authority.
Answer: True
Synecdoche is a figure of speech where a part is used to represent the whole (or vice versa). Here, 'hands' (a part) represents the sailors (the whole).
Answer: Oxymoron
An oxymoron combines two contradictory or mutually exclusive terms (like 'deafening' and 'silence') to create a dramatic or thought-provoking effect.
Answer: Overlords
The Overlords bring peace and prosperity to Earth but hide their true, demonic appearance, eventually guiding humanity through a transcendent evolutionary leap.
Answer: False
'The Silmarillion' was published posthumously in 1977, edited by his son Christopher. It details the First Age of Middle-earth, thousands of years before 'The Hobbit'.
Answer: Cyberpunk
'Neuromancer' coined the term 'cyberspace' and established the cyberpunk aesthetic: 'high tech, low life,' featuring hackers, mega-corporations, and AI.
Answer: The Spice Melange
The Spice Melange, found only on the desert planet Arrakis, is the focal point of politics, religion, and economics in the 'Dune' universe.
Answer: True
Published in 1969, Le Guin's masterpiece uses the Gethenians, who have no fixed gender, to challenge human assumptions about sex, gender roles, and society.
Answer: Large populations and galactic empires using statistics
Hari Seldon invents Psychohistory to predict the fall of the Galactic Empire and shorten the ensuing dark ages, forming the core premise of Asimov's monumental series.
Answer: University professor
David Lurie, a white literature professor, loses his career after an affair with a student and retreats to his daughter's farm, where they face violent realities of the new South Africa.
Answer: True
Published in 1968, the novel follows an unnamed railway freight clerk struggling to maintain his integrity in a society consumed by bribery and moral decay under Kwame Nkrumah's regime.
Answer: The Nigerian Civil War (Biafran War)
Published in 2006, the novel intimately portrays the lives of people caught in the devastating Nigerian Civil War (1967-1970) when the southeastern region attempted to secede as Biafra.
Answer: Abiku
The protagonist Azaro is an 'abiku' (spirit-child), destined to cycle through repeated births and deaths, serving as a metaphor for Nigeria's turbulent post-independence history.
Answer: Zimbabwe (Rhodesia)
'Nervous Conditions' was the first novel published in English by a Black Zimbabwean woman. It explores the impact of colonialism and patriarchy on young girls in 1960s Rhodesia.
Answer: True
Soyinka uses this historical incident to explore the tragic clash between Yoruba metaphysical worldview and British colonial administrative rationalism.
Answer: Igbo
Achebe's masterpiece vividly portrays pre-colonial Igbo society in Umuofia and its devastating collision with British colonialism and Christian missionaries.
Answer: Mary Kom
M.C. Mary Kom's 'Unstoppable' details her rise from a poor farming family in Manipur to becoming a multiple-time world boxing champion and Olympic medalist.
Answer: Joseph Conrad
Rushdie combined the names of his favorite authors, Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekhov, to create the alias 'Joseph Anton' used by his police protectors during his years in hiding.
Answer: Imprisoned in Dehradun and Almora
Nehru wrote 'Toward Freedom' between 1934 and 1935 during his incarceration by the British. It reflects on Indian history and his personal political evolution.