Print Culture and The Modern World
Print Culture and The Modern World
Print Culture and The Modern World
Q.18. There was a virtual reading mania in European countries at the end of the 18th century because :
(a) People wanted to read books and printers produced them in increasing numbers
(b) Churches set up schools in villages carrying literacy to peasants and artisans
(c) Literacy rates went up in Europe as 60 to 80 percent
(d) There was a variety in reading material, so reading became popular
Ans. (b)
Q.19. New forms of popular literature, targeting new audience at the end of the 18th century, were :
(a) Romances, histories, almanacs, ballads and folktales for entertainment
(b) Newspapers and journals combining current affairs (wars and trade) with entertainment
(c) Ideas of scientists and philosophers included in popular literature
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.20. Which of the following statements does not support the view of some historians that Print Culture was
the basis for the French Revolution?
(a) Print culture led to the spread of ideas of enlightened thinkers and encouraged questioning, critical
reasoning and rule of reason rather than tradition
(b) It led to a public culture of debate, discussion, new ideas of social revolution
(c) Print did not directly shape the people's minds but opened up the possibility of thinking differently
(d) It aroused hostility against monarchy, its mentality and mocked it
Ans. (c)
Q.21. Children became an important category of readers in the 19th century, mainly because :
(a) Primary education became compulsory and production of school textbooks became essential for
publishing industry
(b) A children's press devoted to literature for children was set up in France in 1857
(c) Grimm Brothers in Germany published fairytales for children in 1812
(d) Anything vulgar was not published in children's books
Ans. (a)
Q.22. The contribution of Grimm Brothers of Germany to children's literature was :
(a) Publishing stories for them
(b) Spending years on compiling traditional folktales gathered from peasants, editing and publishing them as
a collection in 1812
(c) Having a new shape to rural folktales
(d) All the above
Ans. (b)
Q.23. The role of lending libraries in England in the 19th century was :
(a) Promoting reading among the working-class people
(b) Educating white collar workers, artisans and lower middle-class people
(c) Encouraging self-improvement, self-expression and encouraging the working class to write autobiographies
(d) Both (b) and (c)
Ans. (d)
Q.24. Printers and publishers developed new strategies to sell their products. Which of the following is not
an innovation of the 20th century?
(a) Cheap paperback editions were printed
(b) The dust cover or the book jacket was an innovation
(c) Important novels were serialised, which led to a new way of writing novels
(d) Popular works were sold in England in cheap series called the shilling series
Ans. (c)
Q.25. Through the 19th century, series of innovations in printing technology were :
(a) Richard M. Hoe of New York perfected power-driven cylindrical press capable of printing
Q.36. Which religious reformer was responsible for the Protestant Reformation?
(a) Martin Luther
(b) George Elliot
(c) Maxim Gorky (d) Martin Luther King
Ans. (a)
Q.37. Which of the following is an Enlightened thinker whose writings are said to have created conditions
for a revolution in France?
(a) Louise Sebastian Mercier (b) Rousseau
(c) Mennochio
(d) Gutenberg
Ans. (b)
Q.38. Which of the following was a book showing links between caste and class exploitation?
(a) Ghulamgiri
(b) Amar Jiban
(c) Istri Dharm Vichar
(d) Chhote Aur Bade Ka Sawal
Ans. (d)
Q.39. What were low priced small books printed on poor quality paper and bound in cheap blue covers
called in France?
(a) Chapbooks
(b) Almanacs
(c) Bibliotheque Bleue (d) Ballads
Ans. (c)
Q.40. Paperback editions of books were introducted during
(a) the First World War
(b) the Second World War
(c) the Russian Revolution
(d) the onset of the Great Depression
Ans. (d)
Q.41. The circulation of handwritten manuscripts remained limited because :
(a) they were fragile and awkward to handle (b) they could not be carried around
(c) they could not be read easily
(d) all the above
Ans. (d)
Q.42. In England books carried by petty pedlars and sold for a penny were known as :
(a) Shilling series
(b) Almanacs
(c) Chapbooks
(d) Novels
Ans. (c)
Q.43. Which of the following books reflects the plight of the 'lower castes' and poor in India?
(a) Gulamagiri
(b) Chhote Aur Bade Ka Sawal
(c) Sachchi Kavitayen
(d) All the abvoe
Ans. (d)
Q.44. The Vernacular Press Act of 1878 was modelled on :
(a) Irish Press Laws (b) American Press Laws (c) Chinese Press Laws (d) German Press Laws
Ans. (a)
Q.45. Which of the following reading material were especially for women?
(a) Chap books
(b) Penny magazines
(c) Grimm's Fairytales
(d) The Bible
Ans. (b)
Q.46. "Printing is the ultimate gift of God and the greatest one." Who spoke these words?
(a) Johann Gutenberg (b) New Comen (c) Mahatma Gandhi
(d) Martin Luther
Ans. (d)
Q.47. Who developed the first printing press in the 1430s?
(a) Marcopolo
(b) Johann Gutenberg (c) James Watt
(d) None of the above
Ans. (b)
Q.48. Choose the name of the oldest printed book of Japan.
(a) Diamond Sutra
(b) Bible
(c) Ukiyo
(d) Koran
Ans. (a)
Q.49. In which among the following countries was the earliest kind of print technology developed?
(a) India
(b) England
(c) France
(d) China
Ans. (d)
Q.50. Which of the following statement is true in the light of Vernacular Press Act 1878?
(a) It gave freedom to Vernacular press
(b) It gave financial assistance to Vernacular press
(c) It provided rights to government to censor reports and editorials in the Vernacular press
(d) None of the above
Ans. (c)
Q.51. Who among following introduced hand printing technology in Japan?
(a) Buddhist Missionaries from India
(b) Buddhist Missionaries from Japan
(c) Buddhist Missionaries from China
(d) None of the above
Ans. (c)
Q.52. Which one of the following statements is true?
(a) A children press, devoted to literature for children alone, was set up in France in 1757
(b) Penny magazines were especially meant for men
(c) Lending libraries had been in existence from the seventeenth century
(d) None of the above
Ans. (c)
Q.53. When did the printing press first came to Goa with Portuguese missionaries?
(a) Mid-eighteenth century
(b) Mid-seventeenth century
(c) Mid-sixteenth century
(d) Mid-fifteenth century
Ans. (c)
Q.54. Who started to edit the Bengal Gazette weekly in 1780.
(a) James Augustus Hickey (b) Richard M Hoe (c) Bal Gangadhar Tilak (d) None of the above
Ans. (a)
Q.55. Who among the following was not a women novelist?
(a) Jane Austen
(b) Bront'e Sisters
(c) George Eliot
(d) None of the above
Ans. (d)
Q.56. Who among the following did not write about the caste system?
(a) E. V.. Ramaswamy Naicker (b) Ram Chaddha (c) B. R. Ambedkar
(d) Jyotiba Phule
Ans. (b)
Q.57. Who among the following brought the technology of wood block printing to Europe?
(a) Johann Gutenberg (b) Marco Polo
(c) Richard M Hoe (d) None of the above
Ans. (b)
Q.58. Who among the following agreed to revise Press Laws?
(a) Lord Cornwallis
(b) Lord Dalhousie
(c) Governor General Bentinck
(d) None of the above
Ans. (c)
Q.59. Who wrote her autobiography 'Amar Jiban' published in 1876?
(a) Tara Bai Shinde (b) Rash Sundari Devi (c) Pandita Rama Bai (d) Kailashbashini Devi
Ans. (b)
Q.60. Which one among the following is an autobiography of Rashsundari Devi?
(a) Amar Jiban
(b) Amar Jyoti
(c) Amar Jawan
(d) Amar Zindagi
Ans. (a)
Q.61. Lending libraries came into existence in the :
(a) 17th Century
(b) 18th Century
(c) 19th Century
(d) 20th Century
Ans. (c)
Q.62. Who among the following perfected the power drivers cylindrical press?
(a) James Watt
(b) Newcomen
(c) George Eliot
(d) Richard M Hoe
Ans. (d)