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Humanities 1010 Exam Review Exam Questions With Correct Answers Latest Updated 2026/2027 | 100% Verified | Graded A+.

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12/7/25, 3:01 PM Humanities 1010 Exam Review Flashcards | Quizlet

Arts and Humanities English Literature


Humanities 1010 Exam Review
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Terms in this set (63)


What are the three basic Stain glass, long pointed arches, exterior buttresses, and ribbed
characteristics of gothic vaults.
architecture

what are the different types of arena, thrust theatre, proscenium theatre
theatre settings.

Type of performance space with audience surrounding all sides
arena
of the stage.

A stage that projects out into the seating area and is surrounded
Thrust Theatre
by the audience on three sides

A rectangular-roomed theatre with the audience on one end and
the stage on the other, with both areas separated by a
Proscenium Theatre
proscenium arch that is still the basic theatre architecture of
America's Broadway and of major European theatre companies.

whats the importance of stain They depicted biblical and historical stories. ---- They brought
glass windows in gothic colored light to the interior of churches. ---- They created a
architecture mystical atmosphere inside the churches.

A Doll House Henrik Ibsen

A doll house tone Serious, intense, somber

A Doll House setting (time) Presumably around the late 1870s

A Doll House Setting (Place) Norway

Protagonist of A Doll's House Nora Helmer

Nora's struggle with Krogstad, who threatens to tell her husband
about her past crime, incites Nora's journey of self-discovery and
provides much of the play's dramatic suspense. Nora's primary
Major Conflict in a Dolls House
struggle, however, is against the selfish, stifling, and oppressive
attitudes of her husband, Torvald, and of the society that he
represents.




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, 12/7/25, 3:01 PM Humanities 1010 Exam Review Flashcards | Quizlet

Nora's first conversation with Mrs. Linde; Krogstad's visit and
Rising Action in a Dolls House blackmailing of Nora; Krogstad's delivery of the letter that later
exposes Nora.

The Climax in a Dolls House Torvald reads Krogstad's letter and erupts angrily.

Nora's realization that Torvald is devoted not to her but to the
Falling action in a Dolls House idea of her as someone who depends on him; her decision to
abandon him to find independence.

The sacrificial role of women; parental and filial obligations; the
Themes of A Doll's House
unreliability of appearances

Motif's A Doll's House Nora's definition of freedom; letters

Macaroon
Christmas tree
Dress
Symbols in A Doll's House Letter
House
New Years
Tarantella

Nora's eating of macaroons against Torvald's wishes foreshadows
Foreshadowing in a Dolls House
her later rebellion against Torvald.

The major conflict in Frankenstein revolves around Victor’s
Major conflict in Frankenstein
inability to understand that his actions have repercussions.

The rising action of his reckless quest to create life comes to a
peak when, immediately after animating the monster, he reacts
with horror and disgust and runs from the room. This incident
The rising action of Frankenstein
illustrates the conflict between Victor and moral responsibility:
he has been responsible for making the monster and bringing
him to life, but when he doesn't like the result, he simply rejects it.

The plot suggests potential resolution when Victor reluctantly
Resolution in Frankenstein agrees to fashion a mate for the monster in exchange for the two
of them going somewhere remote.

The murder of Elizabeth shifts the conflict into its final stage, in
which Victor vows to hunt down and kill the monster in revenge
Resolution of Conflict in for all of the deaths. This vow partially resolves the conflict in that
Frankenstein it gives the monster what he wants: he now has the total attention
of his creator, and the fates of the two individuals are
interlocked.

The novel climaxes with Walton finding the monster in the room,
gazing at Victor's dead body and weeping. Victor never
acknowledges the role he played in creating the chaos and
tragedy that resulted in the deaths of several innocent people, as
well as the torment of his creation. Unlike Victor, the monster
Climax of Frankenstein
expresses remorse and self-loathing, suggesting that he
ultimately has become more "human" than his creator. Walton
finally gets to see and hear the monster from his own
perspective, and he is able to feel "a mixture of curiosity and
compassion."

The falling action of the novel quickly concludes with the
The Falling action of
monster explaining his plan to kill himself, then setting off alone
frankenstein
to carry out his plan.



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