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Quiz about Quixotic Literature
Quiz about Quixotic Literature

Quixotic Literature Trivia Quiz


Miguel de Cervantes' acclaimed 1605-1615 novel "Don Quixote" is more than a great read; it has inspired countless other great authors in their own works of literature. This quiz details some of those "quixotic" works, with a few plot spoilers.

A multiple-choice quiz by adams627. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
adams627
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
329,350
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
8 / 10
Plays
427
Awards
Top 5% quiz!
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Question 1 of 10
1. One character from a picaresque novel published in 1980 shows behavior strongly reminiscent of Don Quixote's crazy antics. Although he doesn't tilt at windmills or try to rescue bewitched princesses, he rejects society past the medieval age, obsessing over Boethius' "The Consolation of Philosophy," and fomenting revolution at the Levy Pants Factory in New Orleans. Who is this protagonist of John Kennedy Toole's "A Confederacy of Dunces?" Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. This author wrote on the title page of his 1742 novel "Joseph Andrews" that the book was written "in imitation of the manner of Cervantes, author of 'Don Quixote'." Indeed, the novel shared many thematic elements with Cervantes' picaresque adventure, detailing a series of small adventures with humor and satirical impressions. Who wrote "Joseph Andrews," as well as his more famous novels "Shamela" and "Tom Jones?" Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. One short story that appears in this author's "The Garden of Forking Paths" is entitled "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote." The titular author actually recopies and rewrites the entire Spanish novel, which is more powerful in the twentieth century because history has changed the novel's nature over time. Which blind Argentine author included that short story, in addition to "The Library of Babel" in his collection "Ficciones?" Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. When asked whether or not he had ever read "Don Quixote," this character replies, "I've practically lived it." His quixotic behavior is rendered necessary because, although he is an excellent poet and duelist, he is unable to decry his passionate love for Roxane because of an unfortunate physical impediment. Who is this title character of an Edmond Rostand play, famous for his tragically long nose? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. One of the lesser-known works in this author's canon is "Camino Real," a play that uses famous literary characters from world literature as its own cast. Two major characters in the play are Don Quixote and his squire Sancho Panza. Which American playwright authored "Camino Real" in 1953, years after his breakthrough dramas "The Glass Menagerie" and "A Streetcar Named Desire?" Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Acclaimed Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky pointed out obvious trends between Cervantes' "Don Quixote" and an 1836 novel by Charles Dickens. The namesake protagonist of the story and founder of a literary organization draws many parallels to Quixote's adventures across La Mancha in search of Dulcinea. In which Dickens novel do Augustus Snodgrass, Tracy Tupman, Nathaniel Winkle, and the title character wander across England in search of adventure and something to write about? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. One of the most obvious literary allusions in the 1962 book "Travels with Charley" is that the narrator nicknames the car in which he traverses America "Rocinante," also the name of Don Quixote's steed. Thankfully, the author's camper moved rather more quickly than the knight errant's nag. Which American novelist wrote the autobiographical travelogue "Travels with Charley," his last successful work in a career that began with novels like "The Red Pony" and "Tortilla Flat?" Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. One novel filled with allusions to "Don Quixote" also shares the humorous and happy-go-lucky attitude that permeates Cervantes' masterpiece. The title character attempts to tell his life story, but adds so many embellishments to the narrative that he isn't actually born until Volume III, and the novel teems with irrelevant, albeit hilarious interludes. Parson Yorick's horse is named Rocinante and Uncle Toby resembles Don Quixote in which 1759 novel by Laurence Sterne? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. The 1982 novel "Monsignor Quixote" is a lesser-known work by a British author whose works usually aren't noted for humor, but rather for their themes of Catholicism or espionage. However, that author did earn a few laughs with his humorous tale of a man who believes that he is a descendant of the Man of La Mancha and therefore travels around a modern Spain in imitation of Cervantes' knight. Which author wrote "Monsignor Quixote," in addition to more serious works like "The Power and the Glory," "The Heart of the Matter," and "The End of the Affair?" Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. The 17th century play "The History of Cardenio" was known to have been performed very soon after "Don Quixote" was first published and features many characters and events from Cervantes' novel. Written in collaboration between two authors, the play was re-released in 1727 by Lewis Thombald under the title "Double Falsehood." To which Elizabethan author, along with John Fletcher, is "Cardenio" sometimes attributed? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. One character from a picaresque novel published in 1980 shows behavior strongly reminiscent of Don Quixote's crazy antics. Although he doesn't tilt at windmills or try to rescue bewitched princesses, he rejects society past the medieval age, obsessing over Boethius' "The Consolation of Philosophy," and fomenting revolution at the Levy Pants Factory in New Orleans. Who is this protagonist of John Kennedy Toole's "A Confederacy of Dunces?"

Answer: Ignatius J. Reilly

John Kennedy Toole committed suicide in 1969, so it was lucky that his most famous novel was finally published in 1980. "A Confederacy of Dunces" comically explores the life of the strange, idealistic Ignatius J. Reilly, who is unwilling to accept the boring and money-driven world of 1960s New Orleans. When Ignatius' mother finally kicks her overweight and lazy son out of the house, he manages to find a job at the comically inefficient Levy Pants Factory, where he protests the labor and eventually antagonizes most of the city.

Interestingly, Toole's only successful novel is semi-autobiographical; the author spent time working at a pants factory and selling hot dogs in New Orleans during his life. The book itself was only published because Toole's mother found a copy of the manuscript after her son's tragic suicide at the age of 31. "A Confederacy of Dunces" won the 1981 Pulitzer Prize, the first time the prize was given posthumously.
2. This author wrote on the title page of his 1742 novel "Joseph Andrews" that the book was written "in imitation of the manner of Cervantes, author of 'Don Quixote'." Indeed, the novel shared many thematic elements with Cervantes' picaresque adventure, detailing a series of small adventures with humor and satirical impressions. Who wrote "Joseph Andrews," as well as his more famous novels "Shamela" and "Tom Jones?"

Answer: Henry Fielding

Henry Fielding first gained fame in the eighteenth century English literary world with the anonymous publication of his satirical novel "Shamela." The novel parodied Samuel Richardson's "Pamela" by representing the title character as an amoral woman attracting the advances of a man named Squire Booby. Fielding's next biggest hit was "Joseph Andrews," which was also intended as a parody but ended up becoming a successful novel on its own. Fielding's most enduring work is probably "The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling," written in 1749 as one of the first truly English novels.

The book begins when the title character is discovered by Squire Allworthy, who lives in Somerset, England. Even though Tom and his neighbor Sophia Western fall in love, they cannot marry because of Tom's low social status.

After a series of ridiculous adventures around England, Tom discovers his true parentage and marries Sophia.
3. One short story that appears in this author's "The Garden of Forking Paths" is entitled "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote." The titular author actually recopies and rewrites the entire Spanish novel, which is more powerful in the twentieth century because history has changed the novel's nature over time. Which blind Argentine author included that short story, in addition to "The Library of Babel" in his collection "Ficciones?"

Answer: Jorge Luis Borges

The Argentine author Borges is notable for his short stories in which strange, chaotic events offer symbolic representations, often dealing with themes of writing or literature. Perhaps his most famous collection, "Ficciones," includes notable short stories like "The Circular Ruins," in which a wizard creates an artificial human before realizing his own nonexistence, or "The Library of Babel," during which humans wander around a hexagonally-shaped building filled with all of the world's information. Perhaps Borges' most acclaimed short story is "The Garden of Forking Paths," a complicated story about a Chinese spy for the Germans during World War II, who learns that after every action that a person takes, a path "diverges" and a new world is formed in which the action did not occur.
4. When asked whether or not he had ever read "Don Quixote," this character replies, "I've practically lived it." His quixotic behavior is rendered necessary because, although he is an excellent poet and duelist, he is unable to decry his passionate love for Roxane because of an unfortunate physical impediment. Who is this title character of an Edmond Rostand play, famous for his tragically long nose?

Answer: Cyrano de Bergerac

Edmond Rostand was a French dramatist almost exclusively famous for his 1897 play "Cyrano de Bergerac," a fictionalized account of the life of a real French playwright. The play itself bears almost no resemblance to Cyrano's actual history, highly exaggerating the length of the author's nose, for instance, and modeling Cyrano's love after his real-life cousin. Anthony Burgess (of "A Clockwork Orange" fame) translated Rostand's verse play into English, a translation that also helped the word "panache" enter the English language.

In the play, Cyrano and his rival Christian compete for the love of Roxane (Cyrano's cousin) before they agree that, while Christian will physically be Roxane's love, Cyrano will write poetic love letters to her. Afraid that Roxane would be turned off by Cyrano's huge nose, the protagonist allows Christian's relationship to blossom even after both men are sent into battle. Soon Christian dies, and Cyrano reunites with Roxane minutes before his tragic death.
5. One of the lesser-known works in this author's canon is "Camino Real," a play that uses famous literary characters from world literature as its own cast. Two major characters in the play are Don Quixote and his squire Sancho Panza. Which American playwright authored "Camino Real" in 1953, years after his breakthrough dramas "The Glass Menagerie" and "A Streetcar Named Desire?"

Answer: Tennessee Williams

Tennessee Williams was born Thomas Lanier Williams in 1911, but soon changed his name in honor of his father's birthplace. His early dramas were some of his biggest hits; for instance, his 1944 memory play "The Glass Menagerie" is still read and analyzed today. Perhaps his most famous work, "A Streetcar Named Desire," details the decline of Southern aristocrat society with the mental breakdown of Blanche duBois at the hands of her sister's husband Stanley Kowalski. "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" was written late in Williams' career, which also encompassed hit Broadway plays like "Camino Real," "The Rose Tattoo," "Summer and Smoke," "Suddenly Last Summer," and "Night of the Iguana."
6. Acclaimed Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky pointed out obvious trends between Cervantes' "Don Quixote" and an 1836 novel by Charles Dickens. The namesake protagonist of the story and founder of a literary organization draws many parallels to Quixote's adventures across La Mancha in search of Dulcinea. In which Dickens novel do Augustus Snodgrass, Tracy Tupman, Nathaniel Winkle, and the title character wander across England in search of adventure and something to write about?

Answer: The Pickwick Papers

Just like "Don Quixote," Dickens' first novel entitled "The Pickwick Papers" has an episodic plot structure, where the major characters experience several unrelated, often comical interludes while they scour the countryside for interesting stories. This form fit perfectly for Dickens, because many of his novels were released in serial form, one chapter at a time. In "The Pickwick Papers," Samuel Pickwick is the head of the Pickwick Club, which also includes his aforementioned friends Snodgrass, Tupman, and Winkle. As the plot continues, more people join the club's meanderings, including the comically-drawn Alfred Jingle, who Mr. Pickwick bails out of prison, or Sam Weller, who becomes a servant to Pickwick like Don Quixote's assistant Sancho Panza.

"The Pickwick Papers" itself was used as an allusion in Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women," a novel in which the girls form their own writing society. It also lent its name to Pickwickian syndrome, an early name for Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome, because of a minor character's fictional snoring problems.
7. One of the most obvious literary allusions in the 1962 book "Travels with Charley" is that the narrator nicknames the car in which he traverses America "Rocinante," also the name of Don Quixote's steed. Thankfully, the author's camper moved rather more quickly than the knight errant's nag. Which American novelist wrote the autobiographical travelogue "Travels with Charley," his last successful work in a career that began with novels like "The Red Pony" and "Tortilla Flat?"

Answer: John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck is probably best-known for his Depression-era novel "The Grapes of Wrath," in which the Joad family resists harsh conditions when they move from Oklahoma to California in search of work, but his career was filled with literarily-significant works. "Travels with Charley" was subtitled "In Search of America" and detailed Steinbeck's long trip around the United States in his camper Rocinante, accompanied only by his poodle Charley. Along the way, he makes interesting conclusions about social problems, like the pervasion of mass media, widespread political ignorance, and racial segregation. Steinbeck's other works include "Of Mice and Men," the story of two migrant workers and their doomed friendship, a highly allegorical novella entitled "The Pearl," and enduring novels like "Tortilla Flat" and "Cannery Row."
8. One novel filled with allusions to "Don Quixote" also shares the humorous and happy-go-lucky attitude that permeates Cervantes' masterpiece. The title character attempts to tell his life story, but adds so many embellishments to the narrative that he isn't actually born until Volume III, and the novel teems with irrelevant, albeit hilarious interludes. Parson Yorick's horse is named Rocinante and Uncle Toby resembles Don Quixote in which 1759 novel by Laurence Sterne?

Answer: Tristram Shandy

Laurence Sterne is mostly famous for two novels: "A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy," and his acclaimed comic work "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman." Influences upon "Tristram Shandy" include not only Cervantes' "Don Quixote," but also works like Rabelais' "Gargantua and Pantagruel" and the empiricist beliefs of John Locke. Tristram begins Volumes I and II of his novel by discussing his family and friends, including his quixotic Uncle Toby, the chambermaid Susannah, and Yorick the parson.

His actual birth doesn't become important, apparently, until Volume III. Tristram's actual life isn't much discussed in the novel due to so many ridiculous tangents, but he does mention how his nose was crushed when he was born, how he was named in direct opposition of his father's wishes due to a miscommunication, and how, as a toddler, he was circumcised by a falling window sash.
9. The 1982 novel "Monsignor Quixote" is a lesser-known work by a British author whose works usually aren't noted for humor, but rather for their themes of Catholicism or espionage. However, that author did earn a few laughs with his humorous tale of a man who believes that he is a descendant of the Man of La Mancha and therefore travels around a modern Spain in imitation of Cervantes' knight. Which author wrote "Monsignor Quixote," in addition to more serious works like "The Power and the Glory," "The Heart of the Matter," and "The End of the Affair?"

Answer: Graham Greene

Graham Greene was an early twentieth-century novelist who worked political and religious conflicts into his usually action-filled works. "Monsignor Quixote" isn't a fair representation of the body of his work, which is considerably less comical, but, in addition to the jokes, the novel also managed some political commentary on Spain after the rule of Francisco Franco.

In "The Power and the Glory," a Mexican priest struggles to retain Catholic values after political suppression. "The Heart of the Matter" features Major Henry Scobie, a Catholic convert who commits suicide after having an affair with shipwreck survivor Helen Rolt. Maurice Bendrix and Sarah Miles' attempts at love are frustrated in Greene's 1951 novel "The End of the Affair." Greene's later novels, like "The Quiet American" and "Our Man in Havana" touch upon themes of espionage and political dissatisfaction.
10. The 17th century play "The History of Cardenio" was known to have been performed very soon after "Don Quixote" was first published and features many characters and events from Cervantes' novel. Written in collaboration between two authors, the play was re-released in 1727 by Lewis Thombald under the title "Double Falsehood." To which Elizabethan author, along with John Fletcher, is "Cardenio" sometimes attributed?

Answer: William Shakespeare

"Cardenio" is described as a "lost play," a literary work in which there are no original, surviving copies. After Thombald made his edits to a play attributed to Fletcher and Shakespeare, he was allowed to publish the new script because the play was a previously unknown part of the Bard's canon. Scholars still aren't sure how much of the history was written by the author naturally accredited to Shakespeare, because the style of "Cardenio" is dissimilar to his many other works. In 2010, the group of scholars known as Arden Shakespeare republished "Double Falsehood," and provided proof for why the altered work was originally one written by the great writer and contemporary of Cervantes.

In 1990, another Shakespearean scholar, Thomas Middleton, acquired a manuscript of a play entitled "The Second Maiden's Tragedy," which he believed was a slightly-altered version of "Cardenio" and utilized a style more similar to the Bard's. The new version bore little resemblance to "Double Falsehood" or to "Don Quixote," but did replicate Shakespeare's keen ability to kill off characters in Act V of the play.
Source: Author adams627

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