15.7.26

A Helping Hand: An e-Companion for GIC Lecturer Examination (English Mains)

 

by : Ruchi Agarwal

 

 





ISBN 978-93-91984-47-2

Price: Rs. 101 .00

 

 

available only as e-book on Kindle

 

A Helping Hand: An e-Companion for the GIC Lecturer Examination is a carefully prepared for aspirants appearing in the GIC Lecturer Main Examination (English). Written in a simple, clear, and student-friendly style, this book is designed to make learning and revision— focused, systematic, and effective. Based on the prescribed syllabus, it provides representative long-answer (250 words) and short-answer (150 words) questions with well-organised answers covering literary forms, movements, major authors, criticism, and language (grammar). Since the Literature (Part A) syllabus mentions only the names of authors and not their prescribed works, special emphasis has been placed on major themes, style and technique, literary significance, historical context, critical interpretation, important works, and notable quotations. The answers are concise, examination-oriented, and designed to help aspirants adapt their responses to a variety of related questions. Sufficient language exercises have also been included to support preparation for very short answer questions. The book aims to build both conceptual understanding and answer-writing skills while keeping the language graceful and easy to understand. As a digital edition, it offers the convenience of studying on a smartphone, tablet, Kindle, or computer, with features such as navigation, bookmarking, highlighting, and note-making that make revision quicker and more organised. This book is not intended to replace the prescribed texts or other authentic sources; rather, it is meant to serve as a dependable companion for learning, revision, practice, and examination preparation.

 

Dr. Ruchi Agarwal is an Assistant Professor of English at Sahu Ram Swaroop Mahila Mahavidyalaya in Bareilly. She is also the author of a number of books including— Cultural Conflict in the Plays of Eugene O’Neill, Readings into British and American Drama, Readings into Translation: Theory and Indian Literary Texts, Classical Foundations and the History of English Literature, Readings in Indian and New Literatures in English and A Helping Hand for Assistant Teacher Examination (LT English Mains) Her works are known for their clarity and student-friendly approach.

 

 

Contents of the book include

 

Literature Concepts (150 words answers): 

Literary Forms: Other Literary Forms.  Major Stanza Forms, Sonnet, Ballad, Mock Epic, Elegy

Literary Devices and Techniques: Figures of Speech and Other Literary Terms

Major Literary Movements and Periods: Other Movements, Renaissance, Reformation, Metaphysical Poetry, Classicism / Neoclassicism,  Romanticism, The Pre-Raphaelites, Modern Literature, Postmodern Literature, Colonial Literature, Postcolonial Literature, Indian Writing in English

Critical Concepts: General, Related to Aristotle, Related to John Dryden, Related to Dr. Samuel Johnson, Related to William Wordsworth, Related to S.T. Coleridge, Related to Matthew Arnold, Related to T.S. Eliot

Literature Authors (250 words answers)

British: Geoffrey Chaucer, William Shakespeare, John Milton, John Dryden, Alexander Pope, William Wordsworth, P. B. Shelley, John Keats, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Matthew Arnold, Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, G. B. Shaw, George Orwell, Harold Pinter, Ted Hughes

American: Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, Ernest Hemingway

Indian English: Rabindranath Tagore, Raja Rao, Mulk Raj Anand, Nissim Ezekiel, Girish Karnad, V. S. Naipaul, Amitav Ghosh, Vikram Seth, Kamala Das, Khushwant Singh

Language

Comprehension, Correction of Sentences, Direct and Indirect Narration, Active and Passive Voice

Other Transformations: Change the following Assertive sentences into Interrogative / Exclamatory forms, Affirmative to Negative, Negative to Affirmative, Change the following Exclamatory sentences into Assertive sentences, Change the following Interrogative sentences into Assertive sentences, Change the Degree of Comparison, Change the form of the sentences (Simple / Complex / Compound), Change the sentences using ‘Too…to’ and ‘So…that’, Remove ‘Too’ / ‘Enough’ without changing the meaning. Change the form of words without changing the meaning, Joining and Splitting Sentences, Transformation of Conditional Sentences, Change of Voice within Structures

Synonyms, Antonyms, Homonyms, Jumbled Sentences, Prepositions, Idioms and Phrases, One Word Substitution, Figures of Speech, Prefixes and Suffixes

 


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