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Character Analysis of Emily Grierson in A Rose for Emily...
Emily Grierson, referred to as Miss Emily throughout the story, is the main character of 'A Rose for
Emily,' written by William Faulkner. Emily is born to a proud, aristocratic family sometime during
the Civil War; Miss Emily used to live with her father and servants, in a big decorated house. The
Grierson Family considers themselves superior than other people of the town. According to Miss
Emily's father none of the young boys were suitable for Miss Emily. Due to this attitude of Miss
Emily's father, Miss Emily was not able to develop any real relationship with anyone else, but it was
like her world revolved around her father.
When her father passed away, it was a devastating loss for Miss Emily. The lines from the story 'She
told ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
suggests that Homer Barron is a fun loving person. While, Emily comes out of the house very few
times, and is never seen having fun with people. When Emily proposed Homer Barron for marriage,
Homer refuses to marry Emily, as he did not wanted to overtaken by time and become dull as Emily
would have wished. Thus, Emily poisons Homer Barron and killed him and kept him forever with
her.
Emily?s life has been overtaken by time. And she has halted the passage of time. The passed
passage of time creates a tension in her life. At first she cannot accept the death of her father. After
that she creates tension in the community by refusing to pay the taxes. When the aldermen go to her
house to collect the taxes, she refuses to pay and tells ?I have no taxes in Jefferson. Colonel Sartoris
explained to me.? (Charters 170) The halted passage of time causes her not to even recognize
Colonel?s death. Emily also ends up killing; her only love Homer Barron due to her stubbornness.
And ironically, preserves Homer Barron?s dead body for 30 years in her house. Emily?s father kept
her sheltered longer than she was needed. When she was released, she was under the burdens of
relationships and love. When she knew Homer would leave her, she killed him and kept him forever.
Bibliography:
Faulkner, William. "A Rose for Emily." Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama.
Ed. X.J. Kennedy. New York: Harpers Collins,
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Southern Masculinity in Faulkner’s The Unvanquished Essay...
Southern Masculinity in Faulkner's The Unvanquished
The narrator of Faulkner's The Unvanquished is apparently an adult recounting his childhood. The
first person narrator is a child at the story's outset, but the narrative voice is lucid, adult. Telling the
story of his childhood allows the narrator to distinguish for the reader what he believed as a child
from what he "know[s] better now" (10). The difference affords an examination of dominant
southern masculinity as it is internalized by Bayard and Ringo, and demonstrates the effects on the
boys of the impossible ideal.
The initial indication that narrator Bayard may be an adult recounting his childhood comes with the
past tense in the story's opening line: "Behind the smokehouse ... Show more content on
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(87)
As children, neither Bayard nor Ringo would possess the capacity for critical thinking necessary to
employ the linguistic precision demonstrated above.Children think more abstractly, in grander and
simpler terms. For example, they may take role models unreflectively; Bayard and Ringo play–act
as General Van Dorn and General Pemberton, but they obviously do not understand why these men
are their heroes. Based on what they have been told, and wholly independent of reality, the boys
have constructed a General Pemberton that represents good and a General Grant that represents evil.
By rule, Bayard plays the good guy twice for every single time Ringo gets to. The unfairness of this
rule is apparently as lost on the boys as the idea that in the context of this game, Grant would make
a more suitable good guy for Ringo.
The disparities in their relationship are apparently unnoticed by both Bayard and Ringo. They think
that they are equals. They "had been born in the same month and had both fed at the same breast and
had slept together and eaten together" until they felt like brothers. They are not brothers, though.
When Sartoris comes home in spring, both boys run to meet the man they look up to as a father, and
they enter, Bayard "standing in one stirrup with Father's arm around me, and Ringo holding to the
other stirrup and running beside the horse" (8). Later we find that the boys do sleep together, Bayard
on a bed, and
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The Search for Time in Yoknapatawpha County
Setting is an important aspect of any story, movie, poem and novel. Setting enhances many aspects
of a story by adding time, location and mood into the works. Imagine how different Harry Potter
would be if it took place in South Africa, instead of the magical kingdom of Hogwarts? Setting also
enhances the tone of the narrator by adding effects, such as, weather changes, time of day, time of
the year and the time period of the story. Furthermore, in the short story "A Rose for Emily" by
William Faulkner, the setting is a source of conflict. The narrator's of the story, the town's people,
have an unknown entity, but because the story shifts between time periods and settings, the reader
acquires different points of view from the same ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
William Faulkner's first Gothic literature story ever written is, "A Rose for Emily". Gothic literature
originates from the medieval times in Europe and the United States, specifically during the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Gothic literature emphasizes ghost stories, mysteries and
circumstances often not found in regular stories. It also focuses on a specific theme and setting,
generally a sinister house or a frightening castle, to create a tone and mood of suspense. More
specifically, after the American Civil War in 1866, many Southern writers, such as Faulkner, created
a new genre of writing. Southern gothic is a style of writing that is unique to the Southern States of
South America. Southern Gothic writer's, such as Faulkner, took the depressing, defeated and weary
Southern culture in America, and used it as an inspiration to write. For instance, Faulkner uses
Emily Grierson, the protagonist of "A Rose for Emily", to emphasize unpleasant and dark aspects of
the Southern gothic culture.
The standard definition of the traditional gothic novel tends to refer to the three elements: a setting
in an ancestral house, real or perceived occult events, and a women at risk (Palmer 123).
The home of Emily Grierson is where the majority of the story takes place. The home is a
significant setting because of the detrimental effects time as on it. Without a doubt, as described in
the story, the house was once a beautiful estate,
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Ringo and Bayard in Faulkner's The Unvanquished Essay
Comparing and Contrasting Bayard and Ringo Bayard and his black slave and sidekick, Ringo, are
twelve years old when we are first introduced to them in William Faulkner's The Unvanquished.
Ringo (Marengo) grandson of Joby, is born a slave on John Sartoris' plantation. He and Bayard
nursed from the same slave's breast and become constant companions: "Ringo and I had been born
in the same month," Bayard says, "and had both fed at the same breast and had slept together and
eaten together for so long that Ringo called Granny 'Granny' just like I did, until maybe he wasn't a
nigger anymore or maybe I wasn't a white boy anymore, the two of us neither, not even people any
longer" (7). Ringer serves as Bayard's faithful companion. Certain ... Show more content on
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In fact, she never asks Bayard to do anything to facilitate her enterprise. She discusses everything
with Ringo, while Bayard seems to be merely an onlooker. Ringo seems content with his situation,
immune to the issue of his possible emancipation: "Do you know what I aint?" Ringo says..."I aint a
nigger anymore. I done been abolished." (199). He later becomes more complex, but in
"Ambuscade" he is little more than the cheerful, wide–eyed slave boy who puts his loyalty and
friendship for Bayard above all else. During the Civil War, he assists Granny a great deal in
managing the war–ravaged plantation, including the forgery of Union Army papers to steal
livestock. Bayard is in awe (envy?) when he sees how Ringo can draw on the counterfeit. Ringo
could not write and had refused to learn to print his own name when Loosh was teaching Bayard his
letters: "who had learned to draw immediately by taking up the pen, who had no affinity for it and
had never denied he had not but who learned to draw simply because somebody had to' (142).
Oddly enough, Ringo, who is a prominent character throughout most of the novel, is mysteriously
`silent' in "An odor of Verbena" as an adult. When we meet Bayard and Ringo as grown men, Ringo
is curiously absent, no longer beside Bayard. Away at college, Bayard has come of age while his
`silent' sidekick works on the farm back home. Bayard, the narrator, mentions Ringo's silent
presence twice: when he brings news of John
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William Faulkner’s short novel, The Bear Essay
William Faulkner's short novel, The Bear
"The Bear" is a short novel in an anthology that begins in
Yoknapatwpha County sometime after the Civil War. The story deals with loyalty, honor, truth,
bravery, courage, fear, nature, history and choices. Cleanth Brooks best described this story by
saying, "Faulkner's villains do not respect nature and their fear of it has nothing in common with the
fear of the Lord or with awe in the presence of the divine." (Brooks 149) In the story, we find a bear
that has learned to outwit and survive hunters for years. It wasn't until they took a beast of the wild
and tamed it before they could even come close to the bear. They took a beast of nature to kill a
beast of nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He realized that he had become a part of nature. In the story, Ike had brought a mongrel dog with
him that he had trained to catch the bear. The dog was fast and fearless. When the dog did find the
bear and went after it, Ike would not shoot it but went after the dog instead. Then Sam Fathers said,
"You've done seed him twice now, with a gun in your hands, This time you couldn't have missed
him." Ike then said, "Neither could you, You had the gun, why didn't you shoot him?" (Faulkner
345)
In chapter 4 Ike is going through his Grandfathers ledgers and notices in particular the entry where a
slave woman Eunice had drowned herself in the icy river. It wasn't until he read further that he
realized his Grandfather had gotten Eunice, a slave woman pregnant and then uously having with
his own daughter Tomasina. We can see how loyalty, truth and honor come in later when Ike hunts
down Fonsiba, the Granddaughter of Tomasina in Arkansas to give her inheritance money that
belonged to the McCaslin family. At the end of chapter 4 Ike has gotten married but wants to give
up the inheritance of the plantation. His wife does not understand this, she wants him to keep the
plantation so, she tries to seduce him in bed in efforts of changing his mind yet all he can think of is,
"she is lost," (Faulkner 434) she has no idea of what is
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Light In August Symbolism
American businessman Clement Stone once uttered, "You are a product of your environment. So,
choose the environment that will best develop you toward your objective" (Stone). Free will
represents an internal battleground constantly testing one's acceptance of their actions. William
Faulkner explores the extent to which deterministic forces sway free will among individuals in his
novel Light in August. Joe Christmas faces an array of challenges in his childhood environment,
resulting in patterns of abuse and self–destruction throughout his adult life. Hightower represents
the dangers of holding onto the past, procuring a false existence of fate. Faulkner portrays two
perceptions of free will. One through Hightower, who initially blames his family ... Show more
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When the angry mob chases Joe Christmas to Hightower's house, Hightower responds with, "Listen
to me. He was here that night. He was with me the night of the murder. I swear to God" (464). Of
course, this is a blatant lie, however because Hightower is now using his own moral compass, it can
be reasonably assumed that he has returned to living in the present. When he lives in the present,
Hightower clearly takes ownership of his free will. The first–time Hightower opposes fate he states,
"Perhaps in the moment when I revealed to her not only the depth of my hunger but the fact that
never and never would she have any part in the assuaging of it; perhaps at that moment I became her
seducer and her murderer, author and instrument of her shame and death" (470). As a direct result of
Hightower living in the present, he sees how he contributes to his own actions. He assumes
responsibility for his lack of affection for his wife which leads to her committing adultery, and
eventually her death. His hunger to skip a generation and his deluded relationship with free will are
further illustrated where Faulkner says, "He seems to watch himself, alert, patient, skillful, playing
his cards well, making it appear that he was being driven, uncomplaining, into that which he did not
even then admit had been his desire since before he entered the seminar" (489). Hightower is
coming to the realization that in fact is wasn't fate that brought him to Jefferson, but rather his desire
to live his grandfather's legacy in the town where he died. Hightower doesn't want to feel the pain of
the new generation thus he constructed a fantasy life based on "the old south". Ultimately,
Hightower frees himself from the past and constructs a light to follow for
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Analysis Of The Novel ' Light Of August ' By William Faulkner
Spring Author Report: Joe Christmas William Faulkner 's novel, Light in August, is set in his
fictional town of Yoknapatawpha County, depicting the rural South in the early 1900's. It is a novel
about humanity where Faulkner uses his characters to establish the necessity for human connection.
Joe Christmas, the main character, experiences a tragic journey toward self–identity. Faulkner uses
the character of Joe Christmas to expose how conflict with society and oneself unchains a darkness.
Joe Christmas is alienated from a young age after being dumped at an orphanage, where his
unknown racial identity begins an inner turmoil. Joe is left in an orphanage with no sense of
identity, and ignorant of his mixed ancestry. While in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
After leaving the orphanage, Christmas is thrown into a disturbed family that is void of connection
and love. The family environment he is exposed to is one of fear and cruelty. He gains no
acceptance on account of religious values. When Joe sins by lying to his father about what he did
with the money he gained from selling a cow "[Mr. McEachern strikes] Joe with his fist" (Faulkner
164). Mr. McEachern beats Joe for sinning – lying – and uses religion as a justification of abuse,
thus creating Christmas's warped view of religion. This complex relationship with religion places
Joe in conflict with the societal norm. In his critical essay on Light in August, B. R. McElderry Jr.t
analyzes the role of religion in the novel, highlighting how it leads to the brutalities in the novel.
Christmas is exposed to "a religion of dynamic hatred, intolerance, and frustration" (Gale
McElderry). Mr. McEachern provides Joe Christmas with a religious outlook that is the antithesis of
religion. This fuels Joe's conflict with society by placing him in further isolation from the town.
Christmas forges his first connection with a young prostitute named Bobbie Allen, where his first
instance of violence is seen. He begins having sexual relations with her, and soon tells her that he
"thinks [he has] some nigger blood in [him]" (Faulkner 196). She is the only person Christmas has a
remotely personal
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A Rose For Emily Analysis
Time is something that no one and nothing can escape. In "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner's
depicts what time can do to a society by depicting what time can do to a person, Emily. This theme
of time changing a person and society is accomplished through a very specific point of view. In "A
Rose for Emily" William Faulkner's uses Emily as a symbol for tradition and what occurs as time
passes and newer generations come into power. To begin, the story itself specifically describes
Emily as "a tradition, a duty, and a care"(pg33). Hence, right in the beginning the reader gets a sense
of who Miss Emily is as a person. She is a traditional white woman living in the south that refuses
to conform to this new society. Thus as the story progresses through her deterioration, we also see
the town transition from old style southern to industrialized and modern. Her Father's death was the
start of Emily deterioration and the town's transition from tradition. The town had just signed to
contracts to start paving sidewalks when her strong dominant Father passed. During the summer
after her father died the construction company came to start paving. This company brought in
"niggers and mules and machinery, and a foreman named Homer Barron, a Yankee"(pg36). This
influx of non–southern folk altered the make up of the town not only based on the new sidewalks,
but also the makeup of the community. During this time Emily was sick and when she was seen
again she had cut her hair. This
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William Faulkner 's A Rose For Emily
In the short story, "A Rose for Emily," by William Faulkner there are several changes between the
point of view of the narrator. The identity and reliability of the narrator is unascertainable and
creates more questions than it answers. The narrator is present for all of the scenes that take place in
the story, but does not play a role in the events, and speaks for the town as a whole. The reader is
introduced to Miss Emily Grierson by an onlooker, someone who is not Miss Emily, but a part of
the town that rejects her. The narrator changes point of view as his opinion of Emily change. The
character of the narrator is better understood by examining the tone of the lines spoken by this "we"
person, who changes his/her mind about Miss Emily at certain points in the narration. The first–
person point of view is revealed by the use of the word "our" in the first sentence of the story:
"When Miss Emily died, our whole town went to her funeral..." (Miller) This is also a clue that
confirms that the narrator is indeed part of the town. Although it is never directly explained, it
appears as though the narrator is an older member of the town. This is demonstrated in statements
like "the next generation, with its more modern ideas;" because the narrator does not say "with our
more modern ideas," he makes it clear that he is not one of the younger members of the community.
The use of an older member of the community as a narrator allows Faulkner to employ flashbacks to
explain Miss
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Theme Of Barn Burning
The story Barn Burning let's the reader view as one of Faulkner's most meaningful short stories that
has ever been written. The stories main theme is the loyalty in which Sarty has to find within
himself, wethers it is to blood or justice. Abner Snopes, Sarty's father keeps on reminding him that
family relations are very important and that he was getting to be a man. He must learn to stick to
family blood or he will not have any blood to sticking to Sarty. In William Faulkner's story Barn
Burning, theme analysis, literary devices, and author's style will be discussed.
Loyalty to your family is more important than loyalty to the law. Sarty has some Loyalty to Abner in
the beginning of the story when Abner wants Sarty to lie to the Justice so ... Show more content on
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The descriptive writing allows the reader to visualize the entire story with all the expert uses of
imagery and the immense ability to evoke emotion for the reader. In ¨Barn Burning,¨ the style of
southern gothic literature is pretty common. In the case of Abner dying and Sarty being somewhat
disfigured by being born premature. "And he springing up and into the road again, running again,
knowing it was too late yet still running even after he heard the shot and, an instant later, two shots,
pausing now without knowing he had ceased to run, crying 'pap! Pap!' " (Faulkner
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The Passing of Time in A Rose for Emily, by William Faulkner
The most inevitable aspect of time is that it continues to move on, and it forces people to move with
it. In his story "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner illustrates the passage of time as it affects the
southern hometown of Miss Emily Grierson. The narrater relates the town's recollections of Emily's
life–the unmarried daughter of the late mayor who does not want to pay her property taxes–and
eventually her death. The Gothic and horror elements of the story add to the sensational tale of an
unstable spinster and her morbid secrets. On the exterior, the story seems to be the product of the
townspeople's general curiosity of an estranged and lonely woman; it takes on the character of a
gossip story or a folk tale. However, a closer look at Faulker's treatment of Emily in relation to the
rest of the town indicates that the story has a larger purpose. Emily becomes a fixture in a town that
continues to adapt, and her refusal to change with it leaves her classified as archaic and isolated.
While an initial reading of "A Rose for Emily" would suggest that that the story is about the
eccentrics of Emily Grierson, Faulker's perspective and use of temporal shifts reveal that the story in
fact illustrates the tension between the past and the present, and ultimately displays the danger of
refusing to accept the passage of time. The most significant facet of Faulkner's structure is his use
of the narrator, who portrays Emily's isolation. In the first sentence of the story, the
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Resistance to Change: Miss Emily Grierson
Resistance to Change: Miss Emily Grierson The main character in the short story "A Rose for
Emily" written by William Faulkner is Emily Grierson. She lives in Jefferson Mississippi, in a
fictional county called Yoknapatawpha County. The people of Yoknapatawpha saw Miss Emily as "a
small, fat woman" who was very cold, distant, and lived in her past. Her home "was a big, squarish
frame house that had once been white, decorated with cupolas and spires and scrolled balconies in
the heavily lightsome style of the seventies...". She lived in a little community that was changing
and becoming more modern unlike her house. Her house, as Faulkner describes, "...smelled of dust
and disuse–a close, dank smell"; "it was furnished in heavy, ... Show more content on
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This symbolizes Emily's isolation from the rest of the townspeople. When Emily's father passed
away she became reserved and was in denial of his death. As the ladies of the town got ready to
meet at Emily's house to give their condolences Emily stood at the door dressed like any other day
and told them that her father was not dead. The narrator says, "She did that for three days..." before
she allowed his corpse to be removed from her home. Emily was hitting rock bottom as her father
passed away and it seems she would never be married as she is thirty and still single. The summer
following Emily's father's death the town decided to start construction on the sidewalks to repave
them. Along with the construction company was a Northerner, a Yankee named Homer Barron.
Homer is described as, "...big, dark, ready man, with a big voice and eyes lighter than his face".
Homer became popular around the town as well as with Miss Emily. They were seen more and more
together and the ladies of the town grew old with it. Argiro states that, "Their dates cause gossip to
erupt everywhere..." (par.4). Emily at this point was vulnerable because of her loss and loneliness;
she was destined to fall hopelessly in love. Emily's character expresses her unstable and irrational
side by purchasing
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A Rose For Emily Historicism Review
Student's Name
Professor's Name
Literature
07.12.2017
A Rose for Emily: New Historicism Review
"A Rose for Emily" is a short story written by renowned Mississippi–based writer and Nobel–prize
laureate William Faulkner, that tells the tale of Ms. Emily Grierson's life through the eyes of
someone who witnessed everything that happened in the town of Jefferson. Consequently, the events
were not related in a chronological manner, but rather in the order the narrator recounted it and
chose to tell it, making everything serve as clues to the story's conclusion, and in effect, making the
story appear biased towards the narrator's thoughts about the events (Faulkner, William).
William Faulkner grew up in Mississippi and traces his roots to an ... Show more content on
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Emily is seen, she had gotten fat and her hair had turned iron–gray. For six or seven years, she gave
china–painting lessons to the townspeople's children, but due to the changing generations and their
different ideas, there had been fewer and fewer pupils until she stopped giving the china–painting
lessons altogether. This can be seen as similar to familiar technologies and knowhows that become
outdated with the passage of time and better innovations, how people preferred doing things in the
more efficient way thus rendering the old ways obsolete. There were many examples of this
throughout the story. One instance of this is when the town got free postal service, and Ms. Emily
refused both the mailbox and the house number. We can see that Ms. Emily seemed to be unable to
keep up with the changing times and stubbornly clings to the way of life that she had been
accustomed to despite the changes that were happening around
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Analysis Of The Yoknapatawpha River In As I Lay Dying
Spring; hurricane. Much as these are both related to water, they differ greatly in their impact on
societies – while one brings hope and life to weary travelers, the other brings struggle accompanied
by death. Throughout most of literary history, writers have explored this idea of poly–indicative–
identity, whether that be with the vast depthness of water or some other symbol, and William
Faulkner's novel As I Lay Dying is no exception to this idea. From rivers to the fish that inhabit
them, As I Lay Dying is composed with a symphony of different symbols, however, one of the more
persistent ones is that of the river. By incorporating certain aspects of the Yoknapatawpha River,
Faulkner is able to allow the work to flow more smoothly, more easily incorporate ideas about the
themes of death and barriers, as well as enhance the characterization of certain figures. A symbol is,
at its base, a literary object, an object that besides holding a symbolic meaning also holds a literal
one. Although the symbolic is generally focused upon in class, the literal must not be forgotten, for
it can often be just as important – the primary focus for literal objects is in terms of plot
development and flow. In the novel As I Lay Dying, the Yoknapatawpha River is used to provide a
physical–barrier for the Bundren family. As the Bundrens, and some of their neighbors, are traveling
to bury Addie, they are delayed by rainfall that has made "the river ... too high to get across" (111).
By including this obstacle, Faulkner is able to create a situation in which more characters are
introduced (e.g. Samson, Gillespie, Armstid, etc.) and events are encouraged – if not for the river:
Jewel would have never needed to lift the wagon from the river, the Bundrens would have gotten to
Jefferson prior to Darl burning down Gillespie's barn, and most every event within the 288 page
novel would be irrelevant. It is through plot development that the Yoknapatawpha River functions
literally within As I Lay Dying, however, there are more abstract ways as well. While it is true that
symbols have a literal meaning and function within a work, the purpose of a symbol is to make
connections beyond the scope of the literal, such as with themes.
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The Reactions to the Death of Addie Bundren through...
The Reactions to the Death of Addie Bundren through William Faulkner's
As I Lay Dying. The author of As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner, really contributes to the aspects
of literature through his ability to tell a seemingly incredible story through only the "stream–of–
consciousness" technique. Faulkner takes his insight beyond the piece, through other's views and
thoughts. Although the characters might be acting differently upon each subject or handling each
action in opposite ways, the tone and theme that he uses really brings the whole piece to a perfect
balance. In As I Lay Dying, Faulkner displays contradicting elements through the reactions of the
family members towards the mother's death with the use of dialogue, tone, imagery, and internal
conflict. When speculating about the only female character, in regards to the mother, it is evident
that a predictable aspect will be found in Dewey Dell for she carries the female qualities in the story.
This statement in As I Lay Dying, " "Ma," Dewey Dell says; "ma!" " (Faulkner 48) was the first
reaction made by any of the characters towards the death of the mother, and it came from Dewey
Dell. Reasons for this could be the sexist factor that she is a girl, so her reaction will be more
emotionally projected than that of the male characters. However, the aspect of Dewey Dell not being
able to let go of her mother can also play a role in her reaction. This idea is expressed through "...the
fan is still moving like it has for
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William Faulkner Influence on his Work Essay
The writer and Nobel Prize winner, William Cuthbert Faulkner, was born in New Albany,
Mississippi, on September 25, 1897. Faulkner was the first of four sons to Murry Cuthbert Falkner
and Maud Butler. His family settled in Oxford when he was about five years old, and Faulkner
spends most of his life there. Faulkner was successful early in his life, but during the fifth grade he
lost interest in school and started missing classes. He did not graduate from high school, and later on
he was able to go to the University of Mississippi in Oxford, but dropped out after three semesters.
He is known as one of the most famous Southern literature writers, mostly for his novels and poetry.
William Faulkner's literary career was influenced by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
the men through a sort of respectful affection ..." (Faulkner 79). The Souther culture valued their
community and took it for a granted accomplishment to attend a funeral and help in need. Theses
Southern culture and values influenced some of Faulkner's work. Also, Faulkner represents the old
southern values through his story A Rose for Emily, when Emily starts seeing Homer Barron. The
author Thomas Dilworth refers in his journal A Romance to Kill for: Homicidal Complicity in
Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily", "By entering a love affair with Homer Barron, Emily briefly
rebelled against southern values and then, by ending her affair with him, at least as far the
townspeople were concerned, she conformed against those values"(Dilworth). The older
townspeople believed that Emily forgot her "noblesse oblige". They disliked Barron because he was
a Northerner "Yankee". Faulkner's own Southern culture and value are present in his story. Dilworth
also describes in his journal that the narrator, "... implies his own and his society's cultural values
which influence attitudes and behavior toward Emily in a way that implicates him and the
townspeople in her fate" (Dilworth). Faulkner is describing his own privet love story thorough
Emily's love for Barron. When Faulkner fall in love Estella Oldhams, her parents a banded their
relationship and made Estella marry someone else. In A Rose for Emily, Faulkner wrote that Emily
was prepared to get married, but Barron Faulkner states,
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Essay about William Faulkner and History
William Faulkner and History
In order to fully understand importance of history and the past in Faulkner's writing, it is first
necessary to examine the life he lived and the place that shaped it. William Cuthbert Falkner (the
"u" was later added via his own accord) was born September 25, 1897 in New Albany, Mississippi
(Padgett). Named for his great–grandfather Colonel Falkner, young William was told countless
stories as a boy of the old Colonel and other great heroes of the South. Faulkner himself described
the process of embellishment subjected to one story told by his Aunt over time:
...as [Aunt Jenny] grew older the tale itself grew richer and richer, taking on a mellow splendor like
wine; until what had been a hare–brained ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
While it is possible to regard Faulkner's writing without the knowledge of his Southern heritage,
Faulkner enthusiast and literary Critic Cleanth Brooks argues that in order to understand him, one
must realize the importance of his being born in a particular time and place. Faulkner himself has
made this connection and simply admitted to writing about what he knew best: his "own little
postage stamp of native soil" (Brooks, Time 251). Brooks further develops the notion that Faulkner
uses his personal knowledge and experience in his essay "Faulkner and the Muse of History." He
describes Faulkner's surrounding acquaintances stating that, "...the people that he knew had clinging
to their lives a great deal of the stuff of history–the history that had produced them and had helped
them mold the culture out of which them came" (266). The South of Faulkner's youth was still very
much alive with pre–war memories being passed down through generations and weaving a culture
all of its own. This Southern culture, also the culture Faulkner wrote about, held family very central
to it. Society placed an emphasis on manners and honour, and was characterized by close personal
relationships (Brooks, Muse). Even despite the region's "quite rigid black–white caste system" there
was
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Barn Burning By William Faulkner
William Faulkner's "Barn Burning," is about a southern white family that resides in a rural county in
Mississippi. The low–income family members are the mother Lennie Snopes, the older brother, two
sisters, and an aunt. The story's main characters are, Colonel Sartoris Snopes, a 10– year–old boy,
the father Abner Snopes, the property owner Abner's boss Major de Spain, and his wife, Mrs. Lula
de Spain. Abner Snopes characterized as the antagonist, and Faulkner describes him as an evil,
vengeful man that dislikes the upper–class landowners. Sarty Snopes, the protagonist in "Barn
Burning," struggles with being loyal to his father Abner, or stand up for right and wrong.
William Faulkner (1897–1962), born in New Albany, Mississippi, the oldest of four sons born to
Murry and Maud Butler Falkner(as their name formally spelled).(477) Faulkner named after his
great–grandfather, William Clark Faulkner. Faulkner moved to the town of Oxford Mississippi in
LaFayette County at the age of five. William Faulkner's inspiration for writing comes from the
landscape, history, and the people that live in the area. Faulkner is inspired to write about the
fictional Yoknapatawpha County, and he describes how "he discovers his own little postage stamp
of native soil and is worth writing about, because he would never live long enough to exhaust it."
(Faulkner 477) In "Barn Burning," Faulkner portrays a young boy's love and revulsion for his father,
a frightening man who lives by a "ferocious
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Seaph On The Suwanee Analysis
Zora Hurston elaborates on a small town in west Florida at the beginning of her novel, "Seraph on
the Suwanee". The author uses similes in order to vividly recount the lives of Sawley and it's
inhabitants. Starting with parallel structure, the author compares the south side as to being "flanked"
by the Suwanee River, and the north side as being "flanked" by "cultivated fields". This famous
river is "swift and deep"; the fields are "planted to corn, cane, potatoes, tobacco. . .". But that is a
facade. The author, obviously sophisticated and well cultured in the history of this town, develops,
now, an image much more representative of the real Sawley. Her diction shifting to match the
Sawley dwellers –– plain and old fashioned. Wording like,
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Analysis Of William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily
"A Rose for Emily"
William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" tells a story about the life of a woman who grows up in a
small southern town shortly after the turn of the 20th century. He tells the reader about the struggles
that Ms. Emily and town of Jefferson face in trying to move on from their past and adjusting to the
inevitable changes that time brings.
Hans H Skei writes in his critical essay that "A Rose for Emily" is the first story about Faulkner's
townspeople in any real sense, and it is the first story in which" a community point–of–view–
through a first–person plural narrator" (Skei). In reading Faulkner's story, the reader can see that
when the narrator uses "we", that he is referring to the people of the town. By doing this, the reader
gets a sense that even though the title of the story has the main character's name in it, Faulkner
considers the townspeople to be just as important as Emily in "A Rose for Emily". In the story
Faulkner writes how both of these characters struggle with the changes that occur throughout the
passing years.
Managing change is difficult, but inevitable. Changes also affect people differently. While some
people thrive, others have a harder time in adjusting. While describing Ms. Emily's house, the
narrator tells the reader that cotton mills and warehouses are encroaching on her house. Ms. Emily's
house is described in the story as a style from some years past. In fact, her house was built in the
1870's. What once had been a residential area of the town, is now turning into a thriving industrial
district. This suggests to the reader that the town is progressing while Ms. Emily is stuck in the past.
However, the reader can see from the first part of the story that the people of the town have not been
able to moved on from their past either.
The story starts out at Ms. Emily's funeral. The narrator also tells the reader that for Ms. Emily's
funeral, everyone that lived in the town showed up. During the 1800's and earlier, weddings and
funerals in southern towns were treated as events where everyone was included. But during the time
period of the story, weddings and funerals were only for close friends and family. Faulkner also
writes "the men through a sort of respectful
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Religion In August Religion
Everyone views religion in their own unique way. Everyone's own unique upbringing and
perspective on life help shape their views on religion, and if it's important. In William Faulkner's
novel Light in August, the people in the fictional town of Jefferson Mississippi strictly uphold
religion and use it to create their social standard. The citizens of Jefferson Mississippi display the
stereotypical southern charm, and the various Christian symbols in the novel symbolize how much
faith is a part of the life in Jefferson. This feeling of openness and comfort in Jefferson turns
superficial when the citizens are forced to appeal to the conventional societal standards. The irony
of the situation is the conventional societal standards are contradictory ... Show more content on
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There are many righteous people in religion and a few good–hearted people in the novel, but the
hypocrisy in religion is exposed in the chaos and cruelty that the citizens of Jefferson bring upon
individuals like Christmas. The harsh and unfair treatment of Christmas corrupts Christmas and
limits people in Jefferson from seeing Christmas' intended divinity. The values professed by the
religious people of Jefferson, Mississippi do not align with their actions that abandon and separate
others in society. The hypocrisy demonstrated by the southern citizens of Jefferson show that the
religious standards and expectations that are set are impossible to achieve. The hefty goals,
aspirations, and standards that people thought humans could achieve in the romantic era are not able
to be achieved today. If humanity can no longer meet religion's standards or recognize a person who
represents their savior, what role does religion have in modern life
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Essay about Fallen from Grace: "A Rose for Emily" by...
Fallen From Grace
Emily Grierson, a woman of stature and nobility of the once proud South; transformed to a mere
peasant, through the fall of the Confederacy and the changes that ensued. Tragic in a sense, the story
of her life as told from the author; William Faulkner, in his short story – "A Rose for Emily."
(Faulkner 74–79). First published in the popular magazine of his time in 1930, The Forum; Faulkner
tries to maintain her self image throughout the story through the narrators eyes as being repressed in
nature through her upbringing in society prior to the war and the circumstances of the times as they
unfold – while struggling to fill a void of emptiness inside.
Born and raised in a grand house on a once grand street in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
While the citizens of Jefferson never dared to call her crazy, they believed that with all that was
robbed from her life and with nothing left to hold onto, she had no choice but to relish the life of her
father. Her only silent companion in life remaining seemed to be her manservant; Tobe, who was
tasked with all the daily errands and chores of home.
The townspeople seemed to almost pity the poor woman and as a result the Mayor at the time
Colonel Sartoris, granted her immunity from taxation for eternity; while never actually documenting
this act, by developing a story so tall that ...only a man of that time could have invented such a story,
and only a woman could have believed it. (Faulkner 74) She began to provide china–painting
lessons to the grandchildren of the town–elders to make ends meet. Nevertheless, just as time stood
still to her, the community was growing up, and the great mayor Colonel Sartoris died followed
shortly by the end of her tutoring days. The grandchildren of the town she once taught, no longer
sent their children to her residence. The women in town were convinced no man could attend to the
rituals of the home, and were not necessarily surprised by the dirty and dusty dank smell that
emanated from her residence as a result.
Faulkner uses every detail in an abstract manner to paint a vivid image to the reader of the plight she
endures. The summer following her fathers' death, the community began the
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Theme of Death in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily Essay
Theme of Death in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily
William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" is a tragic tale of a Southern aristocrat, Miss Emily
Grierson, who is the subject of a town's obsession. The narrator, a member of the town, tells the
story of what transpires in a decaying old Southern house that is always under the watchful eye of
the townspeople. They witness Miss Emily's life, her father's death, her turn to insanity and the
death of both her and her lover. The theme of death runs throughout this tale, which is
understandable considering the events that take place in the story. Faulkner uses foreshadowing to
foretell events that will transpire later in the story. Because of this foreshadowing, a reader ... Show
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This description of Emily's hair is important, because one of Emily's hairs will be found next to
Homer's body, and it also shows how Emily is decaying like the house and items inside. Early in the
story Emily writes a letter on stationary of an "archaic shape" and with "fading ink". The references
here are to the way she is always described growing older and decaying. Even Emily's house shares
her "short squat" characteristic and "coquettish decay".
The insanity of Miss Emily is also foretold in A Rose for Emily. When the body of Homer is found
in her bed, the reader can understand that Emily killed him, because her mental stability had been
questioned a number of times. The narrator begins these allusions to her mental state when he tells
how the mayor, Colonel Sartoris, bestows a special tax exemption upon Miss Emily. Colonel
Sartoris makes up a story so unbelievable that it is described as so outlandish that "only a woman
could have believed it". Later, the townspeople talk about her great–aunt, the lady Wyatt, who had
gone completely crazy. They wonder about "poor Emily" with the insanity in her family. Her mental
state comes into question again when the town removes the body of her father. She is said to have
"broke down" and finally let them in to take and bury the body. This is an obvious analogy to her
having a mental breakdown. This is followed with the statement that the townspeople did
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Analysis of Barn Burning Essay
William Faulkner's story "Barn Burning" occurs in the fictive Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi.
It is a story set in the 1930's, a decade of the Great Depression when social and economic problems
existed. "Barn Burning" is a story about social inequality, in particular with the rich land owning
family de Spain in contrast to the poor tenant farming ways of the Sartoris family.
Abner is the father in the family. He is a cold deviant man. His family is constantly moving around
because of the violent crimes he commits. This creates external conflict between Abner and de
Spain. Out of this argument arises Sarty's argument, that deals with sticking to both his morals and
loyal ties to his family.
Abner has been tried once ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The black servant in fancy clothes exerts power over him, making Abner feel like a lesser man.
Sarty responds to the elegant home with a "with a surge of peace and joy." It was like a safe haven
from the terror in his life. In contrast, Abner views the house as a reminder of his low economic
status. He probably feels the injustice and becomes enraged. His anger and perhaps jealousy drives
him to destroy the landowner's expensive rug.
When he is charged ten bushels of corn, he is pushed over the edge and plots to destroy Mrs. De
Spain's barn. In his mind, this would create justice. Sarty's moral views kick in when he becomes
aware of his father's evil plan. He turns against his family in part because of his father's betrayal to
his moral beliefs. At the end he feels grief and despair, not terror. Grief may arise from realizing
how immoral his father has become. Sarty still believes that he was a brave man for having fought
in Colonel Sartoris's calvary. Abner was not so heroic though, when in truth he stole horses from
both armies and profited off their sales. Faulkner alludes to character to the Bible where Abner, the
commander in chief of the armies, didn't try hard to protect King Saul's life.
Sarty's mother expresses her emotions towards the actions of her husband, but at the same time she
respects him. She is against the violence and destruction that he creates, but doesn't
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William Cuthbert Faulkner
William Cuthbert Faulkner
"A preeminent figure in twentieth–century American literature, Faulkner created a profound and
complex body of work in which he often explored exploitation and corruption in the American
South." William Faulkner's writing most commonly set in Yoknapatawpha County, a fictional area
based on his homeland of Mississippi. Explore the history of the South while making thorough
observations of Human Character. The purpose of Faulkner's writing style is to demonstrate a heart
in conflict with itself. He did this using a plethora of narrative viewpoints to enrich the struggle.
(Galenet, Introduction)
William Faulkner's writings are all written with an extremely unique style. "The exuberant and
tropical ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
To escape doing this Faulkner often put a romantic or gothic tone to his writing to make protect his
people. The important thing to remember about his novels is despite their apparent genius and often
romantic viewpoints the events at which they centered around were primarily gothic. Many times in
his writings Faulkner produced images that can be compared to Gothic castles such as "the Sartoris
plantation house in Sartoris and Sanctuary; the ruins of the Old Frenchman's place in Sanctuary and
The Hamlet; the Compson house, in a state of dilapidation, in Absalom, Absalom! and The Sound
and the Fury; Sutpen's Hundred in Absalom, Absalom! from creation to destruction; Miss Burden's
house in Light in August; the McCaslin plantation, still a going concern, in Go Down, Moses and
Intruder in the Dust; the Backus plantation in decline in The Town and as transformed by Mr.
Harriss in "Knight's Gambit" and The Mansion; the old De Spain mansion as transformed by Flem
in The Town and The Mansion. All of these are "castles" in state of decline. They also are frequently
equipped with slave or servant quarters. Only the novel Intruder in the Dust lacks a "castle" instead
it has a middle–class home where a family lives happily. There are also in his books the classic
gothic character types in just about every novel. The Romantic, Byronic, or Faustian heroes, the
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Analysis Of The Unvanquished
William Faulkner; The Unvanquished The title of the novel is derived at a time when the American
Civil war was taking place and is the renowned author, William Faulkner. The novel is divided into
seven stories which are a sequel to each other since the characters of the book are mainly the
Sartoris family who resided in Yoknapatawpha County in the greater state of Mississippi. The
imagery of this novel has helped people, particularly to the Americans to embrace the culture of
determination as depicted by the characters. The characters in the novel include Bayard Sartoris,
Joseph Sartoris, Granny Ringo, Cousin Drusilla and the lieutenant. The novel is precisely about
Bayard Sartoris who is a white boy and he befriends Ringo, an African–American boy at a time
when racial discrimination and slavery was still common. The two boys' relationship is closely
monitored by Granny while Bayard's father, John Sartoris is busy in the civil war since he was a
soldier. The Civil War was between the northerners and the southerners regarding the issue of
slavery hence the friendship between the two boys was suspicious to the people at that time. Bayard
Sartoris is forced to assume the roles of a man despite the fact that he is just a twelve–year–old boy
who deserves to have a role model who would guide him appropriately. The two boys enjoy their
friendship since they are naïve about the harshness of the Civil War. The setting of the novel begins
at a time when the USA was
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William Faulkner 's Unconventional Writing Style
William Faulkner's unconventional writing style is widely renowned for his disregard of literary
rules and his keen ability to peer into the psychological depths of his characters. His novel As I Lay
Dying is no exception to his signature style. This book sets forth the death of Addie Bundren, her
family's journey through Yoknapatawpha County to bury her with her relatives in Jefferson,
Mississippi, and examines each character in depth from a variety of perspectives. While this journey
wreaks havoc among members of the family, As I Lay Dying serves as a dark reminder that life is to
be lived and that happiness is within reach. Addie Bundren, the novel's seminal character, lived a
sad life. She recalls that "I could just remember how my father used to say that the reason for living
was to get ready to stay dead a long time" (169). Although Addie remembers hating her father, she
adopts his philosophy. She says, "I knew at last what he meant" (175) and this understanding guides
her life of sorrow and sadness. She feels no comfort or joy in her husband and merely exists with
him, "I did not even ask him for what he could have given me: not–Anse. That was my duty to him,
to not ask that, and that duty I fulfilled" (174). Even her children have no special place in her heart,
"I gave Anse the children. I did not ask for them" (174). The children merely take from her and she
finds no satisfaction in mothering. The only excitement she finds in life is in her affair with
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The wild Palms If Forget Thee, Jerusalem by...
"If a story is in you, it has to come out" (William Faulkner, The wild Palms [if I forget thee,
Jerusalem]). An American writer in American and southern literature, Faulkner was a spellbinding
author known for experimental style with perfect attention to usage and rhythm. Faulkner's works
were highly influenced by own personal interest, history and personal outlook on faith. Being
intensely rooted in the old America, the America in which was molded by the First World War.
The fictional works that were made released a perspective of life, portraying into the drawn outlook
of making life seem to be disturbing and meaningless. Faulkner's works gave a honest reality of
history a subject which really strapped a lust of interest, due to that ... Show more content on
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The interest that dealt with violence is portrayed through the novels Sanctuary and Requiem For A
Nun. Both related by its violence, in Requiem For A Nun a complete act of violence takes form
other than in the Sanctuary it is meant for a provoking shocking response, both violence is stressed
not through sensation but because it has opposite modes of response. In both novels acts of murder
is portrayed through events of adventure, crime and punishment, linked with social and moral legal
aspects. Faulkner expressed the love of mysterious murder through a short story, A Rose For Emily.
The grim protagonist struggles to keep tradition in the change from the old to the new South. The
dusty life of Emily's holds murder, odd acts, and suicide, which realizes a mysterious curiosity to the
reader. As a traditional moralist Faulkner's one principle is engraved together in all thirteen book,
the significance that belongs to great myths.
That principle is the southern social ethical tradition which Faulkner possesses effortlessly. Being a
traditional man with modern south soaked in, it is not strange that the worlds created through the
novels are specifically a series or related myths build around the conflict of either traditionalism and
the modern world. To illustrate further The unvanquished is a novel which two sides of conflicts are
the acts of tradition, the
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Faulkner's Light in August
Light in August – Hightower's Epiphany
Most criticism concerning Faulkner's novel, Light in August, usually considers the character of Joe
Christmas. Christmas certainly deserves the attention paid to him, but too often this attention
obscures other noteworthy elements of the complex novel. Often lost in the shuffle is another
character, the Reverend Gail Hightower, who deserves greater scrutiny. A closer examination of
Hightower reveals Faulkner's deep concern for the South and the collective suffering of its people.
Hightower, through his own personal epiphany, transcends the curse under which the South has
suffered for so long.
Of course, the central character of Joe Christmas has dominated criticism of the ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Which to me is the worst possible condition a man could find himself in––not knowing what he is
and to know that he will never know. (FIU 72)
According to Faulkner, then, even Christmas does not know his heritage for sure, and that lack of
knowledge apparently condemns him to a racial limbo from which there is no escape.
Actually, Christmas is free to define himself as he sees fit. Even if he does possess Negro blood, it is
not enough to prevent him from passing as a white man, and most characters who know him believe
only that perhaps his father was a Mexican. Christmas passes as a white man by posing as a black
one. James Snead remarks, "Joe Christmas hides his 'blackness' behind the screen of a 'negro's job':
He pretends to 'slave like a negro' so no one will think he is one" (84). By accepting a menial labor
job at a planing mill and living in a shack, he plays the role of a white man playing the role of a
black man. Only when he confesses his suspicions do people see him as black: "I think I got some
nigger blood in me. . . . I don't know. I believe I have" (LIA 216). But this confession hardly
amounts to a definitive statement.
By failing to provide an ultimate answer to the question of Christmas' blood, Faulkner achieves
what John L. Longley, Jr. considers to be "one of [his] clearest strokes of genius" (166). We all must
confront our own racial feelings when we try to force Christmas into a category, and his
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Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily Essay
Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily William Faulkner paints a tragic tale about
the inevitability of change and the futility of attempting to stop it in "A Rose for Emily". This story
is about a lonely upper–class woman struggling with life and traditions in the Old South. Besides
effective uses of literary techniques, such as symbolism and a first plural–person narrative style,
Faulkner succeeds in creating a suspenseful and mysterious story by the use of foreshadowing,
which gives a powerful description about death and the tragic struggle of the main character, Miss
Emily. In general the use of foreshadowing often relates to events in a story, and few are attempted
to describe character. Faulkner has effectively ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The smell that upsets the community is the next foreshadowing of the death of Homer. The smell
comes "a short time after her sweetheart...had deserted her"(509). The manner of Homer's death is
implied in the conversation between Miss Emily and the pharmacist as she is buying arsenic, a
poison used to kill rats, as well as the picture of "skull and bones", which is exactly what the town
people find left of Homer (511). The use of foreshadowing to describe the changes in Emily
physical and emotional life is subtler and relies heavily on symbolism. The descriptions of the
decaying house symbolize Miss Emily's physical and emotional decay, and as well as her mental
problems. It foretells of her downfall, "a fallen monument" (507). The house is full of dust and dark
shadows, "It smelled of dust and disuse–a close, dank smell", and symbolizes the death–filled
environment that Emily lives in (508). To describe Emily's life, Faulkner effectively uses
foreshadowing in conjunction with structure in the chronology of events. He opens the story with
her death, goes backward in time when she is old, goes backward again to the foreshadowed death
of Homer, and then backward again to her romance with Homer and finally to her death. Her first
description is dark; "black" was her color, a representation of death, depression and gloom. Her
second mention is an "upright torso motionless" figure
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Anxiety In A Rose For Emily
Janet Contreras English 102 Professor Caruth October 15, 2017 Pity In "A Rose for Emily" by
William Faulkner, he demonstrates how an individual will go to an extreme to avoid departing from
a loved one. Faulkner introduces us to Emily Grierson who lives in Yoknapatawpha County, and the
story is told in the perspective of one of Yoknapatawpha's citizens during the late 1800's and early
1900's. Throughout the story we notice different behaviors from her that might indicate that she
might have some mental or serious personal issues when it comes to moving on with life after the
loss of a loved one. Could her actions be brought on my separation anxiety? I think Emily
underwent some separation anxiety that caused her to make some crazy things. Throughout the
story, there is no mention of a mother, so this leads me to believe that the only parental figure she
had was her father, Mr. Grierson. He is a single father who was overprotective of his daughter, and
felt no one was good enough for her. Mr. Grierson appears to have been strict which took a toll on
her love life during her father's life time. One of the citizen still recalls "all the young men her father
had driven away" (Faulkner 500). It was not until after her father's death when she meets Homer
Barron. Homer ends up becoming an important individual to her. Lastly, we have our main
character, Emily, who never had anyone besides her father. Her two main tragedies were "her
father's death and a short time after her
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Keeping the Past Alive in in A Rose for Emily by William...
Miss Emily Grierson, the leading character in "A Rose for Emily", is a bizarre woman to say the
least. Faulkner begins this story with Miss Emily's funeral, and continues to tell about the interesting
events in her life. All throughout the story, Miss Emily exhibits many traits of a mentally ill person,
but is never medically diagnosed. Faulkner writes, "Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty, and a
care" (245), meaning that she stuck to her Southern–raised ways. She refused to conform to the
modernization of the world around her. The narrator of this story seems to be a person that knows
Miss Emily and her family very intimately. The narrator also considers themselves apart of the
townspeople referred to as the "we" throughout the story. This story tells about the ups and downs in
the extremely intriguing life of a woman that refuses to leave her past. After her death, the "whole
town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the
women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of her house" (Faulkner 244). No one had been into
her home in at least a decade except for the workers. Faulkner uses imagery to describe the "big,
squarish framed house that had once been white" (244). Miss Emily came from a wealthy family
during the Antebellum Era, and her house appears to not have been touched up since then. Miss
Emily was not one to accept to charity by any means. After the death of her father, Colonel Sartoris
"remitted
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William Faulkner's "As I Lay Dying" Essay
In As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner uses the characters Anse and Cash, and a motif/symbol in "My
mother is a fish," to reveal the psychological and societal problems of the twenties and thirties.
Written as soon as the panic surrounding the stock market in 1929 started, Faulkner is reported as
having, "took one of these [onion] sheets, unscrewed the cap from his fountain pen, and wrote at the
top in blue ink, 'As I Lay Dying.' Then he underlined it twice and wrote the date in the upper right–
hand corner"(Atkinson 15) We must take care to recognize Faulkner not as a man of apathy, but one
of great compassion and indignation at the collapse of the economic foundation of the U.S. This is
central in appreciating the great care with which he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Rippetoe is referring to the condition that Anse has acquired through the heat stroke, anhidrosis,
which would destroy hypothalamus cells and render the body's ability to maintain its internal
temperature through measures such as sweating, impossible. Anse then, through fear of death would
abstain from staying in extreme heat and from working much, if at all. The consequence of this is
the morally decadent, emotionally dead character bringing," . . . Her coming around from behind pa,
looking at us like she dared ere a man. . . 'Meet Mrs. Bundren,' he says. Faulkner symbolizes the
determination and productivity of the late 1930s and during WWII under FDR through Cash's
determination to not stop working on Addie's coffin. Furthermore, Cash's desire to complete Addie's
coffin becomes more than just the making of a coffin, it symbolizes the maternal bond that everyone
shares. Throughout the novel Cash is portrayed as an extremely hard–working individual, one that
contrasts the inability to work on Anse's end. Cash represents the unceasing work of machines, a
relevant allusion given with the advancement of technology throughout the early 1900s,"Yet the
motion of
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William Faulkner 's Literary Accomplishments
William Faulkner was a powerful writer whose highly anthologized works bear the image of the
Southern Gothic tradition and the weight of more than half a century of literary analysis and
criticism. Despite a vast amount of intense and perhaps belated scrutiny directed at Faulkner 's
literary accomplishments, the author himself had a vision and scope not to be outdone by his
commentators. Between 1929 and 1936, Faulkner published novels with characters ranging from
children, thinkers, the insane, the law–breaking, and even those beyond the grave serving as
vehicles for themes of time, sex, race, childhood, retribution, family life, Southern Life, and cultural
change. In the construction of these stories, Faulkner employed an unmistakeably flowery, intense,
and suspenseful narration, often from many different perspectives. He even constructed – in the
truer sense of the word – a whole southern American–themed world (which he named "Jefferson
and Yoknapatawpha County") for his stories and acted through his writing as his world 's historian.
In this essay I turn to part of that history as told by Faulkner in two of his most famous works and
short stories, "Barn Burning" and "A Rose For Emily", with the purpose of realizing the thematic
similarities between the two. Conflict between the protagonists ' convictions and reality itself is the
driving force behind character action and its resolution in both "A Rose For Emily" and "Barn
Burning". The unwillingness of the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Alienation in As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner Essay
William Faulkner is an American novelist whose major work is As I Lay Dying. Faulkner gave each
of his characters traits that are expressed throughout the story. The reader is introduced to each
character through their detailed and descriptive character traits. We are able to delve into the
character's mind and see their personal and distinct traits. He did not tell us anything about the
characters, but he takes us into the mind of each character to analyze what we see there. Even
though these characters lead parallel lives we can see the total alienation and breakdown of the
relationships between each other. Darl, Jewel, and Anse possess character traits that contribute to or
cause the breakdown of their relationship.
Anse ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He even goes so far as to save money when he puts cement on Cash's broken leg instead of paying
for a doctor to put a cast on it. Also, to avoid being sued by Gillespie for Darl setting fire to his barn
he has Darl sent to a mental asylum in Jackson. Furthermore, Faulkner demonstrates Anse's
selfishness with him not realizing that Jewel is the product of Addie's affair. Anse is so self–
absorbed that he has no clue that Addie had an affair or that Jewel is not is son. Anse is so useless
and selfish he is almost dismissed as an individual. Anse views the flood and the fire as more
crosses to bear before he can get his new teeth. He has no concern or regard with what the journey is
doing to his children. His selfishness is also expressed when he says, " I don't, won't begrudge her."
(Faulkner 56). Anse forgives Addie for all the problems that she caused throughout the journey this
moreover demonstrates his selfishness. Anse is constantly indebted to others, but he refuses to
recognize his obligation and excuses himself with his comment, "I aint beholden." (Faulkner 46).
One would think that the death of his wife would bring him closer to his children but it does not. He
only has one reason to complete the journey and that is to get his new teeth. Although, Anse is the
most selfish he is the only one who succeeds in the novel. "Among other things we have the
problem of how to view Anse and the fact that he is triumphant at the end, the only character who
gained
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Symbolism In A Rose For Emily By William Faulkner
Love can distill rage into individuals when it is not mutual. In "A Rose for Emily" by William
Faulkner, things begin to go south as Emily Grierson encounters her biggest fear: change. Ms.
Emily is viewed as a monument and chore to her community. After her father's death, her world
seems to flow accordingly behind his passing. Meanwhile, her emotional health declines in
conjunction with her physical surroundings. Emily Grierson suffers from emotional decay due to
isolation by her father, unrequited love, and unrealistic expectations from the townspeople causing
her to embrace murder.
Although Ms. Emily's father was dead, he still had mental control over her endeavors. She was left
feeling vulnerable and open to love from a male. Emily knew no love outside of her father's grasp.
Faulkner writes how after her father's death, "people hardly saw her at all" (sec.2 para.2). It was
understood around the community that no man was good enough for Ms. Emily, according to her
father. Faulkner expresses symbolism as he describes Emily as "a slender figure in white in the
background..." and her father as "a spraddled silhouette in the foreground... clutching a horsewhip"
(sec.2 para.13). By describing her father as a "silhouette", Faulkner directly foreshadows her father's
role in her current life succeeding his death. He acts as a shadow behind her, foreshadowing her
long term emotional instability. Because of his confinement, Ms. Emily was robbed of the
experience of any intimate
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Different Characters In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying
In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying the story is told from different characters creating many
different perspectives. All though every character has a voice, they are not all created to intelligent
and sympathetic voices. Faulkner controls which characters we closely identify with by the amount
of time he devoted to the characters, the number of entries the person had and the attitude that is
given to these characters. The first deciding factor in which characters the reader would closely
identify with is how much time Faulkner devoted to each character. Some characters in the book
were meant to talk more and we were supposed to get more information from them compared to
others. Darl is a good example of this because his chapters are thoroughly developed with complex
sentences and better thought out ideas. Because of the voice that Faulkner gave Darl, we easily
connect to him and have a better sense of who he is as a character. Not only is Darl one of the better
educated children, he is also an omniscient narrator which enables the reader hear a different
perspective of the same event but from a character who isn't directly experiencing that event. The
opposite of Darl is Dewey Dell. Dewey Dell is not educated and does not have strong sentence
structure in her chapters which is how Faulkner controlled how easily we connect to her. If he
wanted us to connect with her more, he would have given her phrases that were easier to understand
and a higher education that would
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Miss Emily and Her Rose
Miss Emily is a mysterious character in "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner. She is the
protagonist in this work. Emily used to be a vibrant and hopeful young woman, but something has
changed with her. She had plenty of potential suitors, but her father rejected them all. After her
father's death, she is devastated and lonely. It is almost as if she is depressed, but then she meets
homer Barron, a foreman from the north. They spend a lot of time together and the town certainly
notices. The town talks about these two and it spreads around like wildfire. One day, Homer is seen
going into Miss Emily's house and he is never seen again. Loss can affect anyone and it certainly
affects Miss Emily. Miss Emily's psychological resilience to anything remotely traumatic is very
low. She has a very high for need to get love from anyone. Miss Emily is a dynamic character; her
mind and body both change throughout the story, but they are very slight changes that someone
rarely notices at first. Throughout this tale, she changes mentally, socially, and physically. According
to Nicole Smith, One part of her that changes is her need to be social and "After her father's death
she went out very little; after her sweetheart went away people hardly saw her at all" (Faulkner
324). In this quotation, it shows that because of losing two men in her life, it added to her want to
live in solitude. According to Nicole Smith, "Kinney has argued that Miss Emily's delusions,
especially
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Literary Analysis Of A Rose For Emily By William Faulkner
1
Literary Analysis on "A Rose For Emily" by William Faulkner William Faulkner has done a
wonderful work in his essay "A Rose for Emily." Faulkner uses symbols, settings, character
development, and other literary devices to express the life of Emily and the behavior of the people
of Jefferson town towards her. By reading the essay, the audience cannot really figure out who the
narrator is. It seems like the narrator can be the town's collective voice. The fact that the narrator
uses collective pronoun we supports the theory that the narrator is describing the life of "Miss
Emily" on behalf of the townspeople. Faulkner has used the flashback device in his essay to make it
more interesting. The story begins with the portrayal of Emily's funeral and it moves to her past and
at the end the readers realize that the funeral is a flashback as well. The story starts with the death of
Miss Emily when he was seventy–four years old and it takes us back when she is a young and
attractive girl. Faulkner has characterized all the characters in the best possible way. Emily
Grierson, Homer Barron, Judge Stevens – the mayor of Jefferson, Mr. Grierson – Emily's father,
Tobe – Emily's servant, and Colonel Sartoris – a former mayor of Jefferson are the major charters in
the story. The narrator describes Emily as a monument, but with a lot of negativity. The story shows
us how she was a smart young girl and then how she end up being an overprotective and secretive
old woman. She refused to accept the change when her father died and that's why she kept telling all
the people in town that her father is still alive. Homer Barron is much like Emily. Like Emily,
Homer is an outsider and becomes the topic of gossip. The narrator describes Homer as a big man
with dark complexion with a good sense of humor. Tobe's character in the story plays an important
role. He is a loyal and dutiful servant. He cared for Emily till she died, but he walked out of the back
door and never returned after Emily's death. Mr. Grierson was a well–maintained person. When he
was alive, Emily's house was always beautifully maintained. He earned a lot of respect in the
society but when he died the respect towards his family died with him. Faulkner uses
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Character Analysis Of Emily Grierson In A Rose For Emily...

  • 1. Character Analysis of Emily Grierson in A Rose for Emily... Emily Grierson, referred to as Miss Emily throughout the story, is the main character of 'A Rose for Emily,' written by William Faulkner. Emily is born to a proud, aristocratic family sometime during the Civil War; Miss Emily used to live with her father and servants, in a big decorated house. The Grierson Family considers themselves superior than other people of the town. According to Miss Emily's father none of the young boys were suitable for Miss Emily. Due to this attitude of Miss Emily's father, Miss Emily was not able to develop any real relationship with anyone else, but it was like her world revolved around her father. When her father passed away, it was a devastating loss for Miss Emily. The lines from the story 'She told ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... suggests that Homer Barron is a fun loving person. While, Emily comes out of the house very few times, and is never seen having fun with people. When Emily proposed Homer Barron for marriage, Homer refuses to marry Emily, as he did not wanted to overtaken by time and become dull as Emily would have wished. Thus, Emily poisons Homer Barron and killed him and kept him forever with her. Emily?s life has been overtaken by time. And she has halted the passage of time. The passed passage of time creates a tension in her life. At first she cannot accept the death of her father. After that she creates tension in the community by refusing to pay the taxes. When the aldermen go to her house to collect the taxes, she refuses to pay and tells ?I have no taxes in Jefferson. Colonel Sartoris explained to me.? (Charters 170) The halted passage of time causes her not to even recognize Colonel?s death. Emily also ends up killing; her only love Homer Barron due to her stubbornness. And ironically, preserves Homer Barron?s dead body for 30 years in her house. Emily?s father kept her sheltered longer than she was needed. When she was released, she was under the burdens of relationships and love. When she knew Homer would leave her, she killed him and kept him forever. Bibliography: Faulkner, William. "A Rose for Emily." Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama. Ed. X.J. Kennedy. New York: Harpers Collins, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Southern Masculinity in Faulkner’s The Unvanquished Essay... Southern Masculinity in Faulkner's The Unvanquished The narrator of Faulkner's The Unvanquished is apparently an adult recounting his childhood. The first person narrator is a child at the story's outset, but the narrative voice is lucid, adult. Telling the story of his childhood allows the narrator to distinguish for the reader what he believed as a child from what he "know[s] better now" (10). The difference affords an examination of dominant southern masculinity as it is internalized by Bayard and Ringo, and demonstrates the effects on the boys of the impossible ideal. The initial indication that narrator Bayard may be an adult recounting his childhood comes with the past tense in the story's opening line: "Behind the smokehouse ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (87) As children, neither Bayard nor Ringo would possess the capacity for critical thinking necessary to employ the linguistic precision demonstrated above.Children think more abstractly, in grander and simpler terms. For example, they may take role models unreflectively; Bayard and Ringo play–act as General Van Dorn and General Pemberton, but they obviously do not understand why these men are their heroes. Based on what they have been told, and wholly independent of reality, the boys have constructed a General Pemberton that represents good and a General Grant that represents evil. By rule, Bayard plays the good guy twice for every single time Ringo gets to. The unfairness of this rule is apparently as lost on the boys as the idea that in the context of this game, Grant would make a more suitable good guy for Ringo. The disparities in their relationship are apparently unnoticed by both Bayard and Ringo. They think that they are equals. They "had been born in the same month and had both fed at the same breast and had slept together and eaten together" until they felt like brothers. They are not brothers, though. When Sartoris comes home in spring, both boys run to meet the man they look up to as a father, and they enter, Bayard "standing in one stirrup with Father's arm around me, and Ringo holding to the other stirrup and running beside the horse" (8). Later we find that the boys do sleep together, Bayard on a bed, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. The Search for Time in Yoknapatawpha County Setting is an important aspect of any story, movie, poem and novel. Setting enhances many aspects of a story by adding time, location and mood into the works. Imagine how different Harry Potter would be if it took place in South Africa, instead of the magical kingdom of Hogwarts? Setting also enhances the tone of the narrator by adding effects, such as, weather changes, time of day, time of the year and the time period of the story. Furthermore, in the short story "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner, the setting is a source of conflict. The narrator's of the story, the town's people, have an unknown entity, but because the story shifts between time periods and settings, the reader acquires different points of view from the same ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... William Faulkner's first Gothic literature story ever written is, "A Rose for Emily". Gothic literature originates from the medieval times in Europe and the United States, specifically during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Gothic literature emphasizes ghost stories, mysteries and circumstances often not found in regular stories. It also focuses on a specific theme and setting, generally a sinister house or a frightening castle, to create a tone and mood of suspense. More specifically, after the American Civil War in 1866, many Southern writers, such as Faulkner, created a new genre of writing. Southern gothic is a style of writing that is unique to the Southern States of South America. Southern Gothic writer's, such as Faulkner, took the depressing, defeated and weary Southern culture in America, and used it as an inspiration to write. For instance, Faulkner uses Emily Grierson, the protagonist of "A Rose for Emily", to emphasize unpleasant and dark aspects of the Southern gothic culture. The standard definition of the traditional gothic novel tends to refer to the three elements: a setting in an ancestral house, real or perceived occult events, and a women at risk (Palmer 123). The home of Emily Grierson is where the majority of the story takes place. The home is a significant setting because of the detrimental effects time as on it. Without a doubt, as described in the story, the house was once a beautiful estate, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Ringo and Bayard in Faulkner's The Unvanquished Essay Comparing and Contrasting Bayard and Ringo Bayard and his black slave and sidekick, Ringo, are twelve years old when we are first introduced to them in William Faulkner's The Unvanquished. Ringo (Marengo) grandson of Joby, is born a slave on John Sartoris' plantation. He and Bayard nursed from the same slave's breast and become constant companions: "Ringo and I had been born in the same month," Bayard says, "and had both fed at the same breast and had slept together and eaten together for so long that Ringo called Granny 'Granny' just like I did, until maybe he wasn't a nigger anymore or maybe I wasn't a white boy anymore, the two of us neither, not even people any longer" (7). Ringer serves as Bayard's faithful companion. Certain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In fact, she never asks Bayard to do anything to facilitate her enterprise. She discusses everything with Ringo, while Bayard seems to be merely an onlooker. Ringo seems content with his situation, immune to the issue of his possible emancipation: "Do you know what I aint?" Ringo says..."I aint a nigger anymore. I done been abolished." (199). He later becomes more complex, but in "Ambuscade" he is little more than the cheerful, wide–eyed slave boy who puts his loyalty and friendship for Bayard above all else. During the Civil War, he assists Granny a great deal in managing the war–ravaged plantation, including the forgery of Union Army papers to steal livestock. Bayard is in awe (envy?) when he sees how Ringo can draw on the counterfeit. Ringo could not write and had refused to learn to print his own name when Loosh was teaching Bayard his letters: "who had learned to draw immediately by taking up the pen, who had no affinity for it and had never denied he had not but who learned to draw simply because somebody had to' (142). Oddly enough, Ringo, who is a prominent character throughout most of the novel, is mysteriously `silent' in "An odor of Verbena" as an adult. When we meet Bayard and Ringo as grown men, Ringo is curiously absent, no longer beside Bayard. Away at college, Bayard has come of age while his `silent' sidekick works on the farm back home. Bayard, the narrator, mentions Ringo's silent presence twice: when he brings news of John ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. William Faulkner’s short novel, The Bear Essay William Faulkner's short novel, The Bear "The Bear" is a short novel in an anthology that begins in Yoknapatwpha County sometime after the Civil War. The story deals with loyalty, honor, truth, bravery, courage, fear, nature, history and choices. Cleanth Brooks best described this story by saying, "Faulkner's villains do not respect nature and their fear of it has nothing in common with the fear of the Lord or with awe in the presence of the divine." (Brooks 149) In the story, we find a bear that has learned to outwit and survive hunters for years. It wasn't until they took a beast of the wild and tamed it before they could even come close to the bear. They took a beast of nature to kill a beast of nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He realized that he had become a part of nature. In the story, Ike had brought a mongrel dog with him that he had trained to catch the bear. The dog was fast and fearless. When the dog did find the bear and went after it, Ike would not shoot it but went after the dog instead. Then Sam Fathers said, "You've done seed him twice now, with a gun in your hands, This time you couldn't have missed him." Ike then said, "Neither could you, You had the gun, why didn't you shoot him?" (Faulkner 345) In chapter 4 Ike is going through his Grandfathers ledgers and notices in particular the entry where a slave woman Eunice had drowned herself in the icy river. It wasn't until he read further that he realized his Grandfather had gotten Eunice, a slave woman pregnant and then uously having with his own daughter Tomasina. We can see how loyalty, truth and honor come in later when Ike hunts down Fonsiba, the Granddaughter of Tomasina in Arkansas to give her inheritance money that belonged to the McCaslin family. At the end of chapter 4 Ike has gotten married but wants to give up the inheritance of the plantation. His wife does not understand this, she wants him to keep the plantation so, she tries to seduce him in bed in efforts of changing his mind yet all he can think of is, "she is lost," (Faulkner 434) she has no idea of what is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Light In August Symbolism American businessman Clement Stone once uttered, "You are a product of your environment. So, choose the environment that will best develop you toward your objective" (Stone). Free will represents an internal battleground constantly testing one's acceptance of their actions. William Faulkner explores the extent to which deterministic forces sway free will among individuals in his novel Light in August. Joe Christmas faces an array of challenges in his childhood environment, resulting in patterns of abuse and self–destruction throughout his adult life. Hightower represents the dangers of holding onto the past, procuring a false existence of fate. Faulkner portrays two perceptions of free will. One through Hightower, who initially blames his family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When the angry mob chases Joe Christmas to Hightower's house, Hightower responds with, "Listen to me. He was here that night. He was with me the night of the murder. I swear to God" (464). Of course, this is a blatant lie, however because Hightower is now using his own moral compass, it can be reasonably assumed that he has returned to living in the present. When he lives in the present, Hightower clearly takes ownership of his free will. The first–time Hightower opposes fate he states, "Perhaps in the moment when I revealed to her not only the depth of my hunger but the fact that never and never would she have any part in the assuaging of it; perhaps at that moment I became her seducer and her murderer, author and instrument of her shame and death" (470). As a direct result of Hightower living in the present, he sees how he contributes to his own actions. He assumes responsibility for his lack of affection for his wife which leads to her committing adultery, and eventually her death. His hunger to skip a generation and his deluded relationship with free will are further illustrated where Faulkner says, "He seems to watch himself, alert, patient, skillful, playing his cards well, making it appear that he was being driven, uncomplaining, into that which he did not even then admit had been his desire since before he entered the seminar" (489). Hightower is coming to the realization that in fact is wasn't fate that brought him to Jefferson, but rather his desire to live his grandfather's legacy in the town where he died. Hightower doesn't want to feel the pain of the new generation thus he constructed a fantasy life based on "the old south". Ultimately, Hightower frees himself from the past and constructs a light to follow for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Analysis Of The Novel ' Light Of August ' By William Faulkner Spring Author Report: Joe Christmas William Faulkner 's novel, Light in August, is set in his fictional town of Yoknapatawpha County, depicting the rural South in the early 1900's. It is a novel about humanity where Faulkner uses his characters to establish the necessity for human connection. Joe Christmas, the main character, experiences a tragic journey toward self–identity. Faulkner uses the character of Joe Christmas to expose how conflict with society and oneself unchains a darkness. Joe Christmas is alienated from a young age after being dumped at an orphanage, where his unknown racial identity begins an inner turmoil. Joe is left in an orphanage with no sense of identity, and ignorant of his mixed ancestry. While in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After leaving the orphanage, Christmas is thrown into a disturbed family that is void of connection and love. The family environment he is exposed to is one of fear and cruelty. He gains no acceptance on account of religious values. When Joe sins by lying to his father about what he did with the money he gained from selling a cow "[Mr. McEachern strikes] Joe with his fist" (Faulkner 164). Mr. McEachern beats Joe for sinning – lying – and uses religion as a justification of abuse, thus creating Christmas's warped view of religion. This complex relationship with religion places Joe in conflict with the societal norm. In his critical essay on Light in August, B. R. McElderry Jr.t analyzes the role of religion in the novel, highlighting how it leads to the brutalities in the novel. Christmas is exposed to "a religion of dynamic hatred, intolerance, and frustration" (Gale McElderry). Mr. McEachern provides Joe Christmas with a religious outlook that is the antithesis of religion. This fuels Joe's conflict with society by placing him in further isolation from the town. Christmas forges his first connection with a young prostitute named Bobbie Allen, where his first instance of violence is seen. He begins having sexual relations with her, and soon tells her that he "thinks [he has] some nigger blood in [him]" (Faulkner 196). She is the only person Christmas has a remotely personal ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. A Rose For Emily Analysis Time is something that no one and nothing can escape. In "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner's depicts what time can do to a society by depicting what time can do to a person, Emily. This theme of time changing a person and society is accomplished through a very specific point of view. In "A Rose for Emily" William Faulkner's uses Emily as a symbol for tradition and what occurs as time passes and newer generations come into power. To begin, the story itself specifically describes Emily as "a tradition, a duty, and a care"(pg33). Hence, right in the beginning the reader gets a sense of who Miss Emily is as a person. She is a traditional white woman living in the south that refuses to conform to this new society. Thus as the story progresses through her deterioration, we also see the town transition from old style southern to industrialized and modern. Her Father's death was the start of Emily deterioration and the town's transition from tradition. The town had just signed to contracts to start paving sidewalks when her strong dominant Father passed. During the summer after her father died the construction company came to start paving. This company brought in "niggers and mules and machinery, and a foreman named Homer Barron, a Yankee"(pg36). This influx of non–southern folk altered the make up of the town not only based on the new sidewalks, but also the makeup of the community. During this time Emily was sick and when she was seen again she had cut her hair. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. William Faulkner 's A Rose For Emily In the short story, "A Rose for Emily," by William Faulkner there are several changes between the point of view of the narrator. The identity and reliability of the narrator is unascertainable and creates more questions than it answers. The narrator is present for all of the scenes that take place in the story, but does not play a role in the events, and speaks for the town as a whole. The reader is introduced to Miss Emily Grierson by an onlooker, someone who is not Miss Emily, but a part of the town that rejects her. The narrator changes point of view as his opinion of Emily change. The character of the narrator is better understood by examining the tone of the lines spoken by this "we" person, who changes his/her mind about Miss Emily at certain points in the narration. The first– person point of view is revealed by the use of the word "our" in the first sentence of the story: "When Miss Emily died, our whole town went to her funeral..." (Miller) This is also a clue that confirms that the narrator is indeed part of the town. Although it is never directly explained, it appears as though the narrator is an older member of the town. This is demonstrated in statements like "the next generation, with its more modern ideas;" because the narrator does not say "with our more modern ideas," he makes it clear that he is not one of the younger members of the community. The use of an older member of the community as a narrator allows Faulkner to employ flashbacks to explain Miss ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Theme Of Barn Burning The story Barn Burning let's the reader view as one of Faulkner's most meaningful short stories that has ever been written. The stories main theme is the loyalty in which Sarty has to find within himself, wethers it is to blood or justice. Abner Snopes, Sarty's father keeps on reminding him that family relations are very important and that he was getting to be a man. He must learn to stick to family blood or he will not have any blood to sticking to Sarty. In William Faulkner's story Barn Burning, theme analysis, literary devices, and author's style will be discussed. Loyalty to your family is more important than loyalty to the law. Sarty has some Loyalty to Abner in the beginning of the story when Abner wants Sarty to lie to the Justice so ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The descriptive writing allows the reader to visualize the entire story with all the expert uses of imagery and the immense ability to evoke emotion for the reader. In ¨Barn Burning,¨ the style of southern gothic literature is pretty common. In the case of Abner dying and Sarty being somewhat disfigured by being born premature. "And he springing up and into the road again, running again, knowing it was too late yet still running even after he heard the shot and, an instant later, two shots, pausing now without knowing he had ceased to run, crying 'pap! Pap!' " (Faulkner ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. The Passing of Time in A Rose for Emily, by William Faulkner The most inevitable aspect of time is that it continues to move on, and it forces people to move with it. In his story "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner illustrates the passage of time as it affects the southern hometown of Miss Emily Grierson. The narrater relates the town's recollections of Emily's life–the unmarried daughter of the late mayor who does not want to pay her property taxes–and eventually her death. The Gothic and horror elements of the story add to the sensational tale of an unstable spinster and her morbid secrets. On the exterior, the story seems to be the product of the townspeople's general curiosity of an estranged and lonely woman; it takes on the character of a gossip story or a folk tale. However, a closer look at Faulker's treatment of Emily in relation to the rest of the town indicates that the story has a larger purpose. Emily becomes a fixture in a town that continues to adapt, and her refusal to change with it leaves her classified as archaic and isolated. While an initial reading of "A Rose for Emily" would suggest that that the story is about the eccentrics of Emily Grierson, Faulker's perspective and use of temporal shifts reveal that the story in fact illustrates the tension between the past and the present, and ultimately displays the danger of refusing to accept the passage of time. The most significant facet of Faulkner's structure is his use of the narrator, who portrays Emily's isolation. In the first sentence of the story, the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Resistance to Change: Miss Emily Grierson Resistance to Change: Miss Emily Grierson The main character in the short story "A Rose for Emily" written by William Faulkner is Emily Grierson. She lives in Jefferson Mississippi, in a fictional county called Yoknapatawpha County. The people of Yoknapatawpha saw Miss Emily as "a small, fat woman" who was very cold, distant, and lived in her past. Her home "was a big, squarish frame house that had once been white, decorated with cupolas and spires and scrolled balconies in the heavily lightsome style of the seventies...". She lived in a little community that was changing and becoming more modern unlike her house. Her house, as Faulkner describes, "...smelled of dust and disuse–a close, dank smell"; "it was furnished in heavy, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This symbolizes Emily's isolation from the rest of the townspeople. When Emily's father passed away she became reserved and was in denial of his death. As the ladies of the town got ready to meet at Emily's house to give their condolences Emily stood at the door dressed like any other day and told them that her father was not dead. The narrator says, "She did that for three days..." before she allowed his corpse to be removed from her home. Emily was hitting rock bottom as her father passed away and it seems she would never be married as she is thirty and still single. The summer following Emily's father's death the town decided to start construction on the sidewalks to repave them. Along with the construction company was a Northerner, a Yankee named Homer Barron. Homer is described as, "...big, dark, ready man, with a big voice and eyes lighter than his face". Homer became popular around the town as well as with Miss Emily. They were seen more and more together and the ladies of the town grew old with it. Argiro states that, "Their dates cause gossip to erupt everywhere..." (par.4). Emily at this point was vulnerable because of her loss and loneliness; she was destined to fall hopelessly in love. Emily's character expresses her unstable and irrational side by purchasing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. A Rose For Emily Historicism Review Student's Name Professor's Name Literature 07.12.2017 A Rose for Emily: New Historicism Review "A Rose for Emily" is a short story written by renowned Mississippi–based writer and Nobel–prize laureate William Faulkner, that tells the tale of Ms. Emily Grierson's life through the eyes of someone who witnessed everything that happened in the town of Jefferson. Consequently, the events were not related in a chronological manner, but rather in the order the narrator recounted it and chose to tell it, making everything serve as clues to the story's conclusion, and in effect, making the story appear biased towards the narrator's thoughts about the events (Faulkner, William). William Faulkner grew up in Mississippi and traces his roots to an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Emily is seen, she had gotten fat and her hair had turned iron–gray. For six or seven years, she gave china–painting lessons to the townspeople's children, but due to the changing generations and their different ideas, there had been fewer and fewer pupils until she stopped giving the china–painting lessons altogether. This can be seen as similar to familiar technologies and knowhows that become outdated with the passage of time and better innovations, how people preferred doing things in the more efficient way thus rendering the old ways obsolete. There were many examples of this throughout the story. One instance of this is when the town got free postal service, and Ms. Emily refused both the mailbox and the house number. We can see that Ms. Emily seemed to be unable to keep up with the changing times and stubbornly clings to the way of life that she had been accustomed to despite the changes that were happening around ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Analysis Of The Yoknapatawpha River In As I Lay Dying Spring; hurricane. Much as these are both related to water, they differ greatly in their impact on societies – while one brings hope and life to weary travelers, the other brings struggle accompanied by death. Throughout most of literary history, writers have explored this idea of poly–indicative– identity, whether that be with the vast depthness of water or some other symbol, and William Faulkner's novel As I Lay Dying is no exception to this idea. From rivers to the fish that inhabit them, As I Lay Dying is composed with a symphony of different symbols, however, one of the more persistent ones is that of the river. By incorporating certain aspects of the Yoknapatawpha River, Faulkner is able to allow the work to flow more smoothly, more easily incorporate ideas about the themes of death and barriers, as well as enhance the characterization of certain figures. A symbol is, at its base, a literary object, an object that besides holding a symbolic meaning also holds a literal one. Although the symbolic is generally focused upon in class, the literal must not be forgotten, for it can often be just as important – the primary focus for literal objects is in terms of plot development and flow. In the novel As I Lay Dying, the Yoknapatawpha River is used to provide a physical–barrier for the Bundren family. As the Bundrens, and some of their neighbors, are traveling to bury Addie, they are delayed by rainfall that has made "the river ... too high to get across" (111). By including this obstacle, Faulkner is able to create a situation in which more characters are introduced (e.g. Samson, Gillespie, Armstid, etc.) and events are encouraged – if not for the river: Jewel would have never needed to lift the wagon from the river, the Bundrens would have gotten to Jefferson prior to Darl burning down Gillespie's barn, and most every event within the 288 page novel would be irrelevant. It is through plot development that the Yoknapatawpha River functions literally within As I Lay Dying, however, there are more abstract ways as well. While it is true that symbols have a literal meaning and function within a work, the purpose of a symbol is to make connections beyond the scope of the literal, such as with themes. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Reactions to the Death of Addie Bundren through... The Reactions to the Death of Addie Bundren through William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. The author of As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner, really contributes to the aspects of literature through his ability to tell a seemingly incredible story through only the "stream–of– consciousness" technique. Faulkner takes his insight beyond the piece, through other's views and thoughts. Although the characters might be acting differently upon each subject or handling each action in opposite ways, the tone and theme that he uses really brings the whole piece to a perfect balance. In As I Lay Dying, Faulkner displays contradicting elements through the reactions of the family members towards the mother's death with the use of dialogue, tone, imagery, and internal conflict. When speculating about the only female character, in regards to the mother, it is evident that a predictable aspect will be found in Dewey Dell for she carries the female qualities in the story. This statement in As I Lay Dying, " "Ma," Dewey Dell says; "ma!" " (Faulkner 48) was the first reaction made by any of the characters towards the death of the mother, and it came from Dewey Dell. Reasons for this could be the sexist factor that she is a girl, so her reaction will be more emotionally projected than that of the male characters. However, the aspect of Dewey Dell not being able to let go of her mother can also play a role in her reaction. This idea is expressed through "...the fan is still moving like it has for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. William Faulkner Influence on his Work Essay The writer and Nobel Prize winner, William Cuthbert Faulkner, was born in New Albany, Mississippi, on September 25, 1897. Faulkner was the first of four sons to Murry Cuthbert Falkner and Maud Butler. His family settled in Oxford when he was about five years old, and Faulkner spends most of his life there. Faulkner was successful early in his life, but during the fifth grade he lost interest in school and started missing classes. He did not graduate from high school, and later on he was able to go to the University of Mississippi in Oxford, but dropped out after three semesters. He is known as one of the most famous Southern literature writers, mostly for his novels and poetry. William Faulkner's literary career was influenced by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... the men through a sort of respectful affection ..." (Faulkner 79). The Souther culture valued their community and took it for a granted accomplishment to attend a funeral and help in need. Theses Southern culture and values influenced some of Faulkner's work. Also, Faulkner represents the old southern values through his story A Rose for Emily, when Emily starts seeing Homer Barron. The author Thomas Dilworth refers in his journal A Romance to Kill for: Homicidal Complicity in Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily", "By entering a love affair with Homer Barron, Emily briefly rebelled against southern values and then, by ending her affair with him, at least as far the townspeople were concerned, she conformed against those values"(Dilworth). The older townspeople believed that Emily forgot her "noblesse oblige". They disliked Barron because he was a Northerner "Yankee". Faulkner's own Southern culture and value are present in his story. Dilworth also describes in his journal that the narrator, "... implies his own and his society's cultural values which influence attitudes and behavior toward Emily in a way that implicates him and the townspeople in her fate" (Dilworth). Faulkner is describing his own privet love story thorough Emily's love for Barron. When Faulkner fall in love Estella Oldhams, her parents a banded their relationship and made Estella marry someone else. In A Rose for Emily, Faulkner wrote that Emily was prepared to get married, but Barron Faulkner states, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Essay about William Faulkner and History William Faulkner and History In order to fully understand importance of history and the past in Faulkner's writing, it is first necessary to examine the life he lived and the place that shaped it. William Cuthbert Falkner (the "u" was later added via his own accord) was born September 25, 1897 in New Albany, Mississippi (Padgett). Named for his great–grandfather Colonel Falkner, young William was told countless stories as a boy of the old Colonel and other great heroes of the South. Faulkner himself described the process of embellishment subjected to one story told by his Aunt over time: ...as [Aunt Jenny] grew older the tale itself grew richer and richer, taking on a mellow splendor like wine; until what had been a hare–brained ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While it is possible to regard Faulkner's writing without the knowledge of his Southern heritage, Faulkner enthusiast and literary Critic Cleanth Brooks argues that in order to understand him, one must realize the importance of his being born in a particular time and place. Faulkner himself has made this connection and simply admitted to writing about what he knew best: his "own little postage stamp of native soil" (Brooks, Time 251). Brooks further develops the notion that Faulkner uses his personal knowledge and experience in his essay "Faulkner and the Muse of History." He describes Faulkner's surrounding acquaintances stating that, "...the people that he knew had clinging to their lives a great deal of the stuff of history–the history that had produced them and had helped them mold the culture out of which them came" (266). The South of Faulkner's youth was still very much alive with pre–war memories being passed down through generations and weaving a culture all of its own. This Southern culture, also the culture Faulkner wrote about, held family very central to it. Society placed an emphasis on manners and honour, and was characterized by close personal relationships (Brooks, Muse). Even despite the region's "quite rigid black–white caste system" there was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Barn Burning By William Faulkner William Faulkner's "Barn Burning," is about a southern white family that resides in a rural county in Mississippi. The low–income family members are the mother Lennie Snopes, the older brother, two sisters, and an aunt. The story's main characters are, Colonel Sartoris Snopes, a 10– year–old boy, the father Abner Snopes, the property owner Abner's boss Major de Spain, and his wife, Mrs. Lula de Spain. Abner Snopes characterized as the antagonist, and Faulkner describes him as an evil, vengeful man that dislikes the upper–class landowners. Sarty Snopes, the protagonist in "Barn Burning," struggles with being loyal to his father Abner, or stand up for right and wrong. William Faulkner (1897–1962), born in New Albany, Mississippi, the oldest of four sons born to Murry and Maud Butler Falkner(as their name formally spelled).(477) Faulkner named after his great–grandfather, William Clark Faulkner. Faulkner moved to the town of Oxford Mississippi in LaFayette County at the age of five. William Faulkner's inspiration for writing comes from the landscape, history, and the people that live in the area. Faulkner is inspired to write about the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, and he describes how "he discovers his own little postage stamp of native soil and is worth writing about, because he would never live long enough to exhaust it." (Faulkner 477) In "Barn Burning," Faulkner portrays a young boy's love and revulsion for his father, a frightening man who lives by a "ferocious ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Seaph On The Suwanee Analysis Zora Hurston elaborates on a small town in west Florida at the beginning of her novel, "Seraph on the Suwanee". The author uses similes in order to vividly recount the lives of Sawley and it's inhabitants. Starting with parallel structure, the author compares the south side as to being "flanked" by the Suwanee River, and the north side as being "flanked" by "cultivated fields". This famous river is "swift and deep"; the fields are "planted to corn, cane, potatoes, tobacco. . .". But that is a facade. The author, obviously sophisticated and well cultured in the history of this town, develops, now, an image much more representative of the real Sawley. Her diction shifting to match the Sawley dwellers –– plain and old fashioned. Wording like, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Analysis Of William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily "A Rose for Emily" William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" tells a story about the life of a woman who grows up in a small southern town shortly after the turn of the 20th century. He tells the reader about the struggles that Ms. Emily and town of Jefferson face in trying to move on from their past and adjusting to the inevitable changes that time brings. Hans H Skei writes in his critical essay that "A Rose for Emily" is the first story about Faulkner's townspeople in any real sense, and it is the first story in which" a community point–of–view– through a first–person plural narrator" (Skei). In reading Faulkner's story, the reader can see that when the narrator uses "we", that he is referring to the people of the town. By doing this, the reader gets a sense that even though the title of the story has the main character's name in it, Faulkner considers the townspeople to be just as important as Emily in "A Rose for Emily". In the story Faulkner writes how both of these characters struggle with the changes that occur throughout the passing years. Managing change is difficult, but inevitable. Changes also affect people differently. While some people thrive, others have a harder time in adjusting. While describing Ms. Emily's house, the narrator tells the reader that cotton mills and warehouses are encroaching on her house. Ms. Emily's house is described in the story as a style from some years past. In fact, her house was built in the 1870's. What once had been a residential area of the town, is now turning into a thriving industrial district. This suggests to the reader that the town is progressing while Ms. Emily is stuck in the past. However, the reader can see from the first part of the story that the people of the town have not been able to moved on from their past either. The story starts out at Ms. Emily's funeral. The narrator also tells the reader that for Ms. Emily's funeral, everyone that lived in the town showed up. During the 1800's and earlier, weddings and funerals in southern towns were treated as events where everyone was included. But during the time period of the story, weddings and funerals were only for close friends and family. Faulkner also writes "the men through a sort of respectful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Religion In August Religion Everyone views religion in their own unique way. Everyone's own unique upbringing and perspective on life help shape their views on religion, and if it's important. In William Faulkner's novel Light in August, the people in the fictional town of Jefferson Mississippi strictly uphold religion and use it to create their social standard. The citizens of Jefferson Mississippi display the stereotypical southern charm, and the various Christian symbols in the novel symbolize how much faith is a part of the life in Jefferson. This feeling of openness and comfort in Jefferson turns superficial when the citizens are forced to appeal to the conventional societal standards. The irony of the situation is the conventional societal standards are contradictory ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... There are many righteous people in religion and a few good–hearted people in the novel, but the hypocrisy in religion is exposed in the chaos and cruelty that the citizens of Jefferson bring upon individuals like Christmas. The harsh and unfair treatment of Christmas corrupts Christmas and limits people in Jefferson from seeing Christmas' intended divinity. The values professed by the religious people of Jefferson, Mississippi do not align with their actions that abandon and separate others in society. The hypocrisy demonstrated by the southern citizens of Jefferson show that the religious standards and expectations that are set are impossible to achieve. The hefty goals, aspirations, and standards that people thought humans could achieve in the romantic era are not able to be achieved today. If humanity can no longer meet religion's standards or recognize a person who represents their savior, what role does religion have in modern life ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Essay about Fallen from Grace: "A Rose for Emily" by... Fallen From Grace Emily Grierson, a woman of stature and nobility of the once proud South; transformed to a mere peasant, through the fall of the Confederacy and the changes that ensued. Tragic in a sense, the story of her life as told from the author; William Faulkner, in his short story – "A Rose for Emily." (Faulkner 74–79). First published in the popular magazine of his time in 1930, The Forum; Faulkner tries to maintain her self image throughout the story through the narrators eyes as being repressed in nature through her upbringing in society prior to the war and the circumstances of the times as they unfold – while struggling to fill a void of emptiness inside. Born and raised in a grand house on a once grand street in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While the citizens of Jefferson never dared to call her crazy, they believed that with all that was robbed from her life and with nothing left to hold onto, she had no choice but to relish the life of her father. Her only silent companion in life remaining seemed to be her manservant; Tobe, who was tasked with all the daily errands and chores of home. The townspeople seemed to almost pity the poor woman and as a result the Mayor at the time Colonel Sartoris, granted her immunity from taxation for eternity; while never actually documenting this act, by developing a story so tall that ...only a man of that time could have invented such a story, and only a woman could have believed it. (Faulkner 74) She began to provide china–painting lessons to the grandchildren of the town–elders to make ends meet. Nevertheless, just as time stood still to her, the community was growing up, and the great mayor Colonel Sartoris died followed shortly by the end of her tutoring days. The grandchildren of the town she once taught, no longer sent their children to her residence. The women in town were convinced no man could attend to the rituals of the home, and were not necessarily surprised by the dirty and dusty dank smell that emanated from her residence as a result. Faulkner uses every detail in an abstract manner to paint a vivid image to the reader of the plight she endures. The summer following her fathers' death, the community began the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Theme of Death in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily Essay Theme of Death in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" is a tragic tale of a Southern aristocrat, Miss Emily Grierson, who is the subject of a town's obsession. The narrator, a member of the town, tells the story of what transpires in a decaying old Southern house that is always under the watchful eye of the townspeople. They witness Miss Emily's life, her father's death, her turn to insanity and the death of both her and her lover. The theme of death runs throughout this tale, which is understandable considering the events that take place in the story. Faulkner uses foreshadowing to foretell events that will transpire later in the story. Because of this foreshadowing, a reader ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This description of Emily's hair is important, because one of Emily's hairs will be found next to Homer's body, and it also shows how Emily is decaying like the house and items inside. Early in the story Emily writes a letter on stationary of an "archaic shape" and with "fading ink". The references here are to the way she is always described growing older and decaying. Even Emily's house shares her "short squat" characteristic and "coquettish decay". The insanity of Miss Emily is also foretold in A Rose for Emily. When the body of Homer is found in her bed, the reader can understand that Emily killed him, because her mental stability had been questioned a number of times. The narrator begins these allusions to her mental state when he tells how the mayor, Colonel Sartoris, bestows a special tax exemption upon Miss Emily. Colonel Sartoris makes up a story so unbelievable that it is described as so outlandish that "only a woman could have believed it". Later, the townspeople talk about her great–aunt, the lady Wyatt, who had gone completely crazy. They wonder about "poor Emily" with the insanity in her family. Her mental state comes into question again when the town removes the body of her father. She is said to have "broke down" and finally let them in to take and bury the body. This is an obvious analogy to her having a mental breakdown. This is followed with the statement that the townspeople did ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Analysis of Barn Burning Essay William Faulkner's story "Barn Burning" occurs in the fictive Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi. It is a story set in the 1930's, a decade of the Great Depression when social and economic problems existed. "Barn Burning" is a story about social inequality, in particular with the rich land owning family de Spain in contrast to the poor tenant farming ways of the Sartoris family. Abner is the father in the family. He is a cold deviant man. His family is constantly moving around because of the violent crimes he commits. This creates external conflict between Abner and de Spain. Out of this argument arises Sarty's argument, that deals with sticking to both his morals and loyal ties to his family. Abner has been tried once ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The black servant in fancy clothes exerts power over him, making Abner feel like a lesser man. Sarty responds to the elegant home with a "with a surge of peace and joy." It was like a safe haven from the terror in his life. In contrast, Abner views the house as a reminder of his low economic status. He probably feels the injustice and becomes enraged. His anger and perhaps jealousy drives him to destroy the landowner's expensive rug. When he is charged ten bushels of corn, he is pushed over the edge and plots to destroy Mrs. De Spain's barn. In his mind, this would create justice. Sarty's moral views kick in when he becomes aware of his father's evil plan. He turns against his family in part because of his father's betrayal to his moral beliefs. At the end he feels grief and despair, not terror. Grief may arise from realizing how immoral his father has become. Sarty still believes that he was a brave man for having fought in Colonel Sartoris's calvary. Abner was not so heroic though, when in truth he stole horses from both armies and profited off their sales. Faulkner alludes to character to the Bible where Abner, the commander in chief of the armies, didn't try hard to protect King Saul's life. Sarty's mother expresses her emotions towards the actions of her husband, but at the same time she respects him. She is against the violence and destruction that he creates, but doesn't ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. William Cuthbert Faulkner William Cuthbert Faulkner "A preeminent figure in twentieth–century American literature, Faulkner created a profound and complex body of work in which he often explored exploitation and corruption in the American South." William Faulkner's writing most commonly set in Yoknapatawpha County, a fictional area based on his homeland of Mississippi. Explore the history of the South while making thorough observations of Human Character. The purpose of Faulkner's writing style is to demonstrate a heart in conflict with itself. He did this using a plethora of narrative viewpoints to enrich the struggle. (Galenet, Introduction) William Faulkner's writings are all written with an extremely unique style. "The exuberant and tropical ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To escape doing this Faulkner often put a romantic or gothic tone to his writing to make protect his people. The important thing to remember about his novels is despite their apparent genius and often romantic viewpoints the events at which they centered around were primarily gothic. Many times in his writings Faulkner produced images that can be compared to Gothic castles such as "the Sartoris plantation house in Sartoris and Sanctuary; the ruins of the Old Frenchman's place in Sanctuary and The Hamlet; the Compson house, in a state of dilapidation, in Absalom, Absalom! and The Sound and the Fury; Sutpen's Hundred in Absalom, Absalom! from creation to destruction; Miss Burden's house in Light in August; the McCaslin plantation, still a going concern, in Go Down, Moses and Intruder in the Dust; the Backus plantation in decline in The Town and as transformed by Mr. Harriss in "Knight's Gambit" and The Mansion; the old De Spain mansion as transformed by Flem in The Town and The Mansion. All of these are "castles" in state of decline. They also are frequently equipped with slave or servant quarters. Only the novel Intruder in the Dust lacks a "castle" instead it has a middle–class home where a family lives happily. There are also in his books the classic gothic character types in just about every novel. The Romantic, Byronic, or Faustian heroes, the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Analysis Of The Unvanquished William Faulkner; The Unvanquished The title of the novel is derived at a time when the American Civil war was taking place and is the renowned author, William Faulkner. The novel is divided into seven stories which are a sequel to each other since the characters of the book are mainly the Sartoris family who resided in Yoknapatawpha County in the greater state of Mississippi. The imagery of this novel has helped people, particularly to the Americans to embrace the culture of determination as depicted by the characters. The characters in the novel include Bayard Sartoris, Joseph Sartoris, Granny Ringo, Cousin Drusilla and the lieutenant. The novel is precisely about Bayard Sartoris who is a white boy and he befriends Ringo, an African–American boy at a time when racial discrimination and slavery was still common. The two boys' relationship is closely monitored by Granny while Bayard's father, John Sartoris is busy in the civil war since he was a soldier. The Civil War was between the northerners and the southerners regarding the issue of slavery hence the friendship between the two boys was suspicious to the people at that time. Bayard Sartoris is forced to assume the roles of a man despite the fact that he is just a twelve–year–old boy who deserves to have a role model who would guide him appropriately. The two boys enjoy their friendship since they are naïve about the harshness of the Civil War. The setting of the novel begins at a time when the USA was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. William Faulkner 's Unconventional Writing Style William Faulkner's unconventional writing style is widely renowned for his disregard of literary rules and his keen ability to peer into the psychological depths of his characters. His novel As I Lay Dying is no exception to his signature style. This book sets forth the death of Addie Bundren, her family's journey through Yoknapatawpha County to bury her with her relatives in Jefferson, Mississippi, and examines each character in depth from a variety of perspectives. While this journey wreaks havoc among members of the family, As I Lay Dying serves as a dark reminder that life is to be lived and that happiness is within reach. Addie Bundren, the novel's seminal character, lived a sad life. She recalls that "I could just remember how my father used to say that the reason for living was to get ready to stay dead a long time" (169). Although Addie remembers hating her father, she adopts his philosophy. She says, "I knew at last what he meant" (175) and this understanding guides her life of sorrow and sadness. She feels no comfort or joy in her husband and merely exists with him, "I did not even ask him for what he could have given me: not–Anse. That was my duty to him, to not ask that, and that duty I fulfilled" (174). Even her children have no special place in her heart, "I gave Anse the children. I did not ask for them" (174). The children merely take from her and she finds no satisfaction in mothering. The only excitement she finds in life is in her affair with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. The wild Palms If Forget Thee, Jerusalem by... "If a story is in you, it has to come out" (William Faulkner, The wild Palms [if I forget thee, Jerusalem]). An American writer in American and southern literature, Faulkner was a spellbinding author known for experimental style with perfect attention to usage and rhythm. Faulkner's works were highly influenced by own personal interest, history and personal outlook on faith. Being intensely rooted in the old America, the America in which was molded by the First World War. The fictional works that were made released a perspective of life, portraying into the drawn outlook of making life seem to be disturbing and meaningless. Faulkner's works gave a honest reality of history a subject which really strapped a lust of interest, due to that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The interest that dealt with violence is portrayed through the novels Sanctuary and Requiem For A Nun. Both related by its violence, in Requiem For A Nun a complete act of violence takes form other than in the Sanctuary it is meant for a provoking shocking response, both violence is stressed not through sensation but because it has opposite modes of response. In both novels acts of murder is portrayed through events of adventure, crime and punishment, linked with social and moral legal aspects. Faulkner expressed the love of mysterious murder through a short story, A Rose For Emily. The grim protagonist struggles to keep tradition in the change from the old to the new South. The dusty life of Emily's holds murder, odd acts, and suicide, which realizes a mysterious curiosity to the reader. As a traditional moralist Faulkner's one principle is engraved together in all thirteen book, the significance that belongs to great myths. That principle is the southern social ethical tradition which Faulkner possesses effortlessly. Being a traditional man with modern south soaked in, it is not strange that the worlds created through the novels are specifically a series or related myths build around the conflict of either traditionalism and the modern world. To illustrate further The unvanquished is a novel which two sides of conflicts are the acts of tradition, the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Faulkner's Light in August Light in August – Hightower's Epiphany Most criticism concerning Faulkner's novel, Light in August, usually considers the character of Joe Christmas. Christmas certainly deserves the attention paid to him, but too often this attention obscures other noteworthy elements of the complex novel. Often lost in the shuffle is another character, the Reverend Gail Hightower, who deserves greater scrutiny. A closer examination of Hightower reveals Faulkner's deep concern for the South and the collective suffering of its people. Hightower, through his own personal epiphany, transcends the curse under which the South has suffered for so long. Of course, the central character of Joe Christmas has dominated criticism of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Which to me is the worst possible condition a man could find himself in––not knowing what he is and to know that he will never know. (FIU 72) According to Faulkner, then, even Christmas does not know his heritage for sure, and that lack of knowledge apparently condemns him to a racial limbo from which there is no escape. Actually, Christmas is free to define himself as he sees fit. Even if he does possess Negro blood, it is not enough to prevent him from passing as a white man, and most characters who know him believe only that perhaps his father was a Mexican. Christmas passes as a white man by posing as a black one. James Snead remarks, "Joe Christmas hides his 'blackness' behind the screen of a 'negro's job': He pretends to 'slave like a negro' so no one will think he is one" (84). By accepting a menial labor job at a planing mill and living in a shack, he plays the role of a white man playing the role of a black man. Only when he confesses his suspicions do people see him as black: "I think I got some nigger blood in me. . . . I don't know. I believe I have" (LIA 216). But this confession hardly amounts to a definitive statement. By failing to provide an ultimate answer to the question of Christmas' blood, Faulkner achieves what John L. Longley, Jr. considers to be "one of [his] clearest strokes of genius" (166). We all must confront our own racial feelings when we try to force Christmas into a category, and his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily Essay Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily William Faulkner paints a tragic tale about the inevitability of change and the futility of attempting to stop it in "A Rose for Emily". This story is about a lonely upper–class woman struggling with life and traditions in the Old South. Besides effective uses of literary techniques, such as symbolism and a first plural–person narrative style, Faulkner succeeds in creating a suspenseful and mysterious story by the use of foreshadowing, which gives a powerful description about death and the tragic struggle of the main character, Miss Emily. In general the use of foreshadowing often relates to events in a story, and few are attempted to describe character. Faulkner has effectively ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The smell that upsets the community is the next foreshadowing of the death of Homer. The smell comes "a short time after her sweetheart...had deserted her"(509). The manner of Homer's death is implied in the conversation between Miss Emily and the pharmacist as she is buying arsenic, a poison used to kill rats, as well as the picture of "skull and bones", which is exactly what the town people find left of Homer (511). The use of foreshadowing to describe the changes in Emily physical and emotional life is subtler and relies heavily on symbolism. The descriptions of the decaying house symbolize Miss Emily's physical and emotional decay, and as well as her mental problems. It foretells of her downfall, "a fallen monument" (507). The house is full of dust and dark shadows, "It smelled of dust and disuse–a close, dank smell", and symbolizes the death–filled environment that Emily lives in (508). To describe Emily's life, Faulkner effectively uses foreshadowing in conjunction with structure in the chronology of events. He opens the story with her death, goes backward in time when she is old, goes backward again to the foreshadowed death of Homer, and then backward again to her romance with Homer and finally to her death. Her first description is dark; "black" was her color, a representation of death, depression and gloom. Her second mention is an "upright torso motionless" figure ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Anxiety In A Rose For Emily Janet Contreras English 102 Professor Caruth October 15, 2017 Pity In "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner, he demonstrates how an individual will go to an extreme to avoid departing from a loved one. Faulkner introduces us to Emily Grierson who lives in Yoknapatawpha County, and the story is told in the perspective of one of Yoknapatawpha's citizens during the late 1800's and early 1900's. Throughout the story we notice different behaviors from her that might indicate that she might have some mental or serious personal issues when it comes to moving on with life after the loss of a loved one. Could her actions be brought on my separation anxiety? I think Emily underwent some separation anxiety that caused her to make some crazy things. Throughout the story, there is no mention of a mother, so this leads me to believe that the only parental figure she had was her father, Mr. Grierson. He is a single father who was overprotective of his daughter, and felt no one was good enough for her. Mr. Grierson appears to have been strict which took a toll on her love life during her father's life time. One of the citizen still recalls "all the young men her father had driven away" (Faulkner 500). It was not until after her father's death when she meets Homer Barron. Homer ends up becoming an important individual to her. Lastly, we have our main character, Emily, who never had anyone besides her father. Her two main tragedies were "her father's death and a short time after her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Keeping the Past Alive in in A Rose for Emily by William... Miss Emily Grierson, the leading character in "A Rose for Emily", is a bizarre woman to say the least. Faulkner begins this story with Miss Emily's funeral, and continues to tell about the interesting events in her life. All throughout the story, Miss Emily exhibits many traits of a mentally ill person, but is never medically diagnosed. Faulkner writes, "Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty, and a care" (245), meaning that she stuck to her Southern–raised ways. She refused to conform to the modernization of the world around her. The narrator of this story seems to be a person that knows Miss Emily and her family very intimately. The narrator also considers themselves apart of the townspeople referred to as the "we" throughout the story. This story tells about the ups and downs in the extremely intriguing life of a woman that refuses to leave her past. After her death, the "whole town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of her house" (Faulkner 244). No one had been into her home in at least a decade except for the workers. Faulkner uses imagery to describe the "big, squarish framed house that had once been white" (244). Miss Emily came from a wealthy family during the Antebellum Era, and her house appears to not have been touched up since then. Miss Emily was not one to accept to charity by any means. After the death of her father, Colonel Sartoris "remitted ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. William Faulkner's "As I Lay Dying" Essay In As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner uses the characters Anse and Cash, and a motif/symbol in "My mother is a fish," to reveal the psychological and societal problems of the twenties and thirties. Written as soon as the panic surrounding the stock market in 1929 started, Faulkner is reported as having, "took one of these [onion] sheets, unscrewed the cap from his fountain pen, and wrote at the top in blue ink, 'As I Lay Dying.' Then he underlined it twice and wrote the date in the upper right– hand corner"(Atkinson 15) We must take care to recognize Faulkner not as a man of apathy, but one of great compassion and indignation at the collapse of the economic foundation of the U.S. This is central in appreciating the great care with which he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Rippetoe is referring to the condition that Anse has acquired through the heat stroke, anhidrosis, which would destroy hypothalamus cells and render the body's ability to maintain its internal temperature through measures such as sweating, impossible. Anse then, through fear of death would abstain from staying in extreme heat and from working much, if at all. The consequence of this is the morally decadent, emotionally dead character bringing," . . . Her coming around from behind pa, looking at us like she dared ere a man. . . 'Meet Mrs. Bundren,' he says. Faulkner symbolizes the determination and productivity of the late 1930s and during WWII under FDR through Cash's determination to not stop working on Addie's coffin. Furthermore, Cash's desire to complete Addie's coffin becomes more than just the making of a coffin, it symbolizes the maternal bond that everyone shares. Throughout the novel Cash is portrayed as an extremely hard–working individual, one that contrasts the inability to work on Anse's end. Cash represents the unceasing work of machines, a relevant allusion given with the advancement of technology throughout the early 1900s,"Yet the motion of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. William Faulkner 's Literary Accomplishments William Faulkner was a powerful writer whose highly anthologized works bear the image of the Southern Gothic tradition and the weight of more than half a century of literary analysis and criticism. Despite a vast amount of intense and perhaps belated scrutiny directed at Faulkner 's literary accomplishments, the author himself had a vision and scope not to be outdone by his commentators. Between 1929 and 1936, Faulkner published novels with characters ranging from children, thinkers, the insane, the law–breaking, and even those beyond the grave serving as vehicles for themes of time, sex, race, childhood, retribution, family life, Southern Life, and cultural change. In the construction of these stories, Faulkner employed an unmistakeably flowery, intense, and suspenseful narration, often from many different perspectives. He even constructed – in the truer sense of the word – a whole southern American–themed world (which he named "Jefferson and Yoknapatawpha County") for his stories and acted through his writing as his world 's historian. In this essay I turn to part of that history as told by Faulkner in two of his most famous works and short stories, "Barn Burning" and "A Rose For Emily", with the purpose of realizing the thematic similarities between the two. Conflict between the protagonists ' convictions and reality itself is the driving force behind character action and its resolution in both "A Rose For Emily" and "Barn Burning". The unwillingness of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Alienation in As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner Essay William Faulkner is an American novelist whose major work is As I Lay Dying. Faulkner gave each of his characters traits that are expressed throughout the story. The reader is introduced to each character through their detailed and descriptive character traits. We are able to delve into the character's mind and see their personal and distinct traits. He did not tell us anything about the characters, but he takes us into the mind of each character to analyze what we see there. Even though these characters lead parallel lives we can see the total alienation and breakdown of the relationships between each other. Darl, Jewel, and Anse possess character traits that contribute to or cause the breakdown of their relationship. Anse ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He even goes so far as to save money when he puts cement on Cash's broken leg instead of paying for a doctor to put a cast on it. Also, to avoid being sued by Gillespie for Darl setting fire to his barn he has Darl sent to a mental asylum in Jackson. Furthermore, Faulkner demonstrates Anse's selfishness with him not realizing that Jewel is the product of Addie's affair. Anse is so self– absorbed that he has no clue that Addie had an affair or that Jewel is not is son. Anse is so useless and selfish he is almost dismissed as an individual. Anse views the flood and the fire as more crosses to bear before he can get his new teeth. He has no concern or regard with what the journey is doing to his children. His selfishness is also expressed when he says, " I don't, won't begrudge her." (Faulkner 56). Anse forgives Addie for all the problems that she caused throughout the journey this moreover demonstrates his selfishness. Anse is constantly indebted to others, but he refuses to recognize his obligation and excuses himself with his comment, "I aint beholden." (Faulkner 46). One would think that the death of his wife would bring him closer to his children but it does not. He only has one reason to complete the journey and that is to get his new teeth. Although, Anse is the most selfish he is the only one who succeeds in the novel. "Among other things we have the problem of how to view Anse and the fact that he is triumphant at the end, the only character who gained ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Symbolism In A Rose For Emily By William Faulkner Love can distill rage into individuals when it is not mutual. In "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner, things begin to go south as Emily Grierson encounters her biggest fear: change. Ms. Emily is viewed as a monument and chore to her community. After her father's death, her world seems to flow accordingly behind his passing. Meanwhile, her emotional health declines in conjunction with her physical surroundings. Emily Grierson suffers from emotional decay due to isolation by her father, unrequited love, and unrealistic expectations from the townspeople causing her to embrace murder. Although Ms. Emily's father was dead, he still had mental control over her endeavors. She was left feeling vulnerable and open to love from a male. Emily knew no love outside of her father's grasp. Faulkner writes how after her father's death, "people hardly saw her at all" (sec.2 para.2). It was understood around the community that no man was good enough for Ms. Emily, according to her father. Faulkner expresses symbolism as he describes Emily as "a slender figure in white in the background..." and her father as "a spraddled silhouette in the foreground... clutching a horsewhip" (sec.2 para.13). By describing her father as a "silhouette", Faulkner directly foreshadows her father's role in her current life succeeding his death. He acts as a shadow behind her, foreshadowing her long term emotional instability. Because of his confinement, Ms. Emily was robbed of the experience of any intimate ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Different Characters In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying the story is told from different characters creating many different perspectives. All though every character has a voice, they are not all created to intelligent and sympathetic voices. Faulkner controls which characters we closely identify with by the amount of time he devoted to the characters, the number of entries the person had and the attitude that is given to these characters. The first deciding factor in which characters the reader would closely identify with is how much time Faulkner devoted to each character. Some characters in the book were meant to talk more and we were supposed to get more information from them compared to others. Darl is a good example of this because his chapters are thoroughly developed with complex sentences and better thought out ideas. Because of the voice that Faulkner gave Darl, we easily connect to him and have a better sense of who he is as a character. Not only is Darl one of the better educated children, he is also an omniscient narrator which enables the reader hear a different perspective of the same event but from a character who isn't directly experiencing that event. The opposite of Darl is Dewey Dell. Dewey Dell is not educated and does not have strong sentence structure in her chapters which is how Faulkner controlled how easily we connect to her. If he wanted us to connect with her more, he would have given her phrases that were easier to understand and a higher education that would ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Miss Emily and Her Rose Miss Emily is a mysterious character in "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner. She is the protagonist in this work. Emily used to be a vibrant and hopeful young woman, but something has changed with her. She had plenty of potential suitors, but her father rejected them all. After her father's death, she is devastated and lonely. It is almost as if she is depressed, but then she meets homer Barron, a foreman from the north. They spend a lot of time together and the town certainly notices. The town talks about these two and it spreads around like wildfire. One day, Homer is seen going into Miss Emily's house and he is never seen again. Loss can affect anyone and it certainly affects Miss Emily. Miss Emily's psychological resilience to anything remotely traumatic is very low. She has a very high for need to get love from anyone. Miss Emily is a dynamic character; her mind and body both change throughout the story, but they are very slight changes that someone rarely notices at first. Throughout this tale, she changes mentally, socially, and physically. According to Nicole Smith, One part of her that changes is her need to be social and "After her father's death she went out very little; after her sweetheart went away people hardly saw her at all" (Faulkner 324). In this quotation, it shows that because of losing two men in her life, it added to her want to live in solitude. According to Nicole Smith, "Kinney has argued that Miss Emily's delusions, especially ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Literary Analysis Of A Rose For Emily By William Faulkner 1 Literary Analysis on "A Rose For Emily" by William Faulkner William Faulkner has done a wonderful work in his essay "A Rose for Emily." Faulkner uses symbols, settings, character development, and other literary devices to express the life of Emily and the behavior of the people of Jefferson town towards her. By reading the essay, the audience cannot really figure out who the narrator is. It seems like the narrator can be the town's collective voice. The fact that the narrator uses collective pronoun we supports the theory that the narrator is describing the life of "Miss Emily" on behalf of the townspeople. Faulkner has used the flashback device in his essay to make it more interesting. The story begins with the portrayal of Emily's funeral and it moves to her past and at the end the readers realize that the funeral is a flashback as well. The story starts with the death of Miss Emily when he was seventy–four years old and it takes us back when she is a young and attractive girl. Faulkner has characterized all the characters in the best possible way. Emily Grierson, Homer Barron, Judge Stevens – the mayor of Jefferson, Mr. Grierson – Emily's father, Tobe – Emily's servant, and Colonel Sartoris – a former mayor of Jefferson are the major charters in the story. The narrator describes Emily as a monument, but with a lot of negativity. The story shows us how she was a smart young girl and then how she end up being an overprotective and secretive old woman. She refused to accept the change when her father died and that's why she kept telling all the people in town that her father is still alive. Homer Barron is much like Emily. Like Emily, Homer is an outsider and becomes the topic of gossip. The narrator describes Homer as a big man with dark complexion with a good sense of humor. Tobe's character in the story plays an important role. He is a loyal and dutiful servant. He cared for Emily till she died, but he walked out of the back door and never returned after Emily's death. Mr. Grierson was a well–maintained person. When he was alive, Emily's house was always beautifully maintained. He earned a lot of respect in the society but when he died the respect towards his family died with him. Faulkner uses ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...