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Modern English Literature (1901–1945 and Post-Modern 1945+) is a goldmine for BCS questions. The focus areas are Nobel Prize winners in literature, dystopian fiction, stream of consciousness technique, famous quotes from modern works, and author-work matching. This topic consistently appears in every BCS exam with 2–3 questions.
| Author | Key Works | Famous Quote/Detail |
|---|---|---|
| T.S. Eliot | The Waste Land, Murder in the Cathedral, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock | "April is the cruellest month" (Waste Land) — Nobel 1948, American-born British |
| W.B. Yeats | The Second Coming, Easter 1916, The Tower | "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold" — Nobel 1923, Irish poet |
| George Orwell | 1984, Animal Farm | "Big Brother is watching you" (1984), "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others" (Animal Farm) — dystopian/political |
| William Golding | Lord of the Flies | Human savagery without civilization — Nobel 1983 |
| Samuel Beckett | Waiting for Godot | Absurdist drama, nothing happens — Nobel 1969, Irish |
| Virginia Woolf | Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, A Room of One's Own | Stream of consciousness technique, feminist |
| James Joyce | Ulysses, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Dubliners | Stream of consciousness, Irish, Ulysses set in Dublin |
| Ernest Hemingway | The Old Man and the Sea, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls | Nobel 1954, American, "Iceberg Theory" (minimalist style) |
| Robert Frost | The Road Not Taken, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening | "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood" — American poet |
| Author | Key Work | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Joseph Conrad | Heart of Darkness | "The horror! The horror!" — Polish-British |
| D.H. Lawrence | Sons and Lovers, Lady Chatterley's Lover | Controversial for explicit content |
| George Bernard Shaw | Pygmalion, Arms and the Man, Man and Superman | Nobel 1925, Irish dramatist |
| Year | Winner | Country | Key Work |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1907 | Rudyard Kipling | British (born India) | The Jungle Book, Kim |
| 1923 | W.B. Yeats | Irish | The Tower, The Second Coming |
| 1925 | George Bernard Shaw | Irish | Pygmalion |
| 1948 | T.S. Eliot | American-British | The Waste Land |
| 1950 | Bertrand Russell | British | Philosophy/Literature |
| 1953 | Winston Churchill | British | History/Memoirs |
| 1954 | Ernest Hemingway | American | The Old Man and the Sea |
| 1969 | Samuel Beckett | Irish | Waiting for Godot |
| 1983 | William Golding | British | Lord of the Flies |
| 2001 | V.S. Naipaul | Trinidadian-British | A House for Mr Biswas |
Orwell's Two Books — Separate the Quotes:
Nobel Winners Year Trick — "KYS-ERC-HBG-N":
Stream of Consciousness = Woolf + Joyce — "WJ flows like a stream"
Frost = American poet — "Frost is cool, American school" (Don't confuse with British poets)
Eliot's April: "April is the cruellest month" = The Waste Land (not Prufrock)
Q1. "April is the cruellest month" is the opening line of — (a) Murder in the Cathedral (b) The Waste Land (c) The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (d) The Hollow Men Answer: (b) The Waste Land — T.S. Eliot's landmark modernist poem, published in 1922.
Q2. Who wrote Waiting for Godot? (a) George Orwell (b) T.S. Eliot (c) Samuel Beckett (d) James Joyce Answer: (c) Samuel Beckett — An absurdist play where two characters wait endlessly for someone named Godot who never arrives. Beckett won the Nobel Prize in 1969.
Q3. "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood" is from — (a) Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening (b) The Road Not Taken (c) The Waste Land (d) The Second Coming Answer: (b) The Road Not Taken — By Robert Frost, about choices in life.
Q4. Which author used the "stream of consciousness" technique? (a) George Orwell (b) Ernest Hemingway (c) Virginia Woolf (d) Robert Frost Answer: (c) Virginia Woolf — Her novels Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse are prime examples of this narrative technique. James Joyce also used it in Ulysses.
Q5. Who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954? (a) T.S. Eliot (b) William Golding (c) Samuel Beckett (d) Ernest Hemingway Answer: (d) Ernest Hemingway — For The Old Man and the Sea and his overall literary contribution.