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William Faulkner
William Faulkner
(1897-1962), who came from an old southern family, grew up in Oxford,
Mississippi. He joined the Canadian, and later the British, Royal
Air Force during the First World War, studied for a while at the
University of Mississippi, and temporarily worked for a New York
bookstore and a New Orleans newspaper. Except for some trips to
Europe and Asia, and a few brief stays in Hollywood as a scriptwriter,
he worked on his novels and short stories on a farm in Oxford.
In an attempt to create a saga of his own, Faulkner has invented
a host of characters typical of the historical growth and subsequent
decadence of the South. The human drama in Faulkner's novels is
then built on the model of the actual, historical drama extending
over almost a century and a half Each story and each novel contributes
to the construction of a whole, which is the imaginary Yoknapatawpha
County and its inhabitants. Their theme is the decay of the old
South, as represented by the Sartoris and Compson families, and
the emergence of ruthless and brash newcomers, the Snopeses.
Theme and technique
- the distortion of time through the use of the inner monologue
are fused particularly successfully in The Sound and the Fury (1929),
the downfall of the Compson family seen through the minds of several
characters. The novel Sanctuary (1931) is about the degeneration
of Temple Drake, a young girl from a distinguished southern family.
Its sequel, Requiem For A Nun (1951), written partly as a drama,
centered on the courtroom trial of a Negro woman who had once been
a party to Temple Drake's debauchery.
In Light in
August (1932), prejudice is shown to be most destructive when it
is internalized, as in Joe Christmas, who believes, though there
is no proof of it, that one of his parents was a Negro. The theme
of racial prejudice is brought up again in Absalom, Absalom! (1936),
in which a young man is rejected by his father and brother because
of his mixed blood. Faulkner's most outspoken moral evaluation of
the relationship and the problems between Negroes and whites is
to be found in Intruder In the Dust (1948).
In 1940, Faulkner published the first volume of the Snopes trilogy,
The Hamlet, to be followed by two volumes, The Town (1957) and The
Mansion (1959), all of them tracing the rise of the insidious Snopes
family to positions of power and wealth in the community. The reivers,
his last - and most humorous - work, with great many similarities
to Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, appeared in 1962, the year of
Faulkner's death.
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From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier
Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series
Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures.
To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
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