Note to players: Two answers required. Carl Jung introduced the names for these two personality traits to the lexicon of psychology in his 1921 book Psychological Types. For 10 points each:
[10e] Name these two opposing traits that define the “E” in the Big Five personality model, often popularly defined via their respective manifestation as shyness or outgoingness.
ANSWER: introversion AND extraversion [accept introvert in place of “introversion”; accept extravert in place of “extraversion”]
[10h] Name this character who likens themselves to Lot’s wife while writing a novel in which “there won’t be a part for Frank Sinatra or John Wayne.”
ANSWER: Kurt Vonnegut [or Kurt Vonnegut; prompt on the narrator of Slaughterhouse-Five or the author of Slaughterhouse-Five]
[10m] Karen Horney wrote a book on the Freudian predecessor to this term “and Human Growth” that centralizes childhood experiences. This personality trait involving strong negative emotions also appears in the Big Five Model.
ANSWER: neuroticism [accept neurosis or Neurosis and Human Growth]
[10e] Vonnegut wrote a self-insert prologue chapter into Slaughterhouse-Five, which primarily follows this character who has “come unstuck in time.”
ANSWER: Billy Pilgrim [or Billy Pilgrim]
[10h] This psychologist related Galen’s personality types to the two-dimensional space created by extraversion and neuroticism. This German psychologist and his wife, Sybil, later appended psychoticism to create the P·E·N model.
ANSWER: Hans Jürgen Eysenck
[10m] Vonnegut calls himself Philboyd Studge in the preface to this other novel he narrates. In this novel set in Midland City, the protagonist bites off Kilgore Trout’s finger after reading Trout’s book Now It Can Be Told.
ANSWER: Breakfast of Champions, or Goodbye Blue Monday
<SM, Social Science>