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William Faulkner
1897 - 1962

William Faulkner, a major American 20th-century novelist,
chronicled the decline and decay of the aristocratic South with
an imaginative power and psychological depth that transcend mere
regionalism.
William Faulkner was born on Sept. 25, 1897, in New Albany,
Miss. He grew up in Oxford, Miss., which appears in his fiction
as "Jefferson" in "Yoknapatawpha County." William was the oldest
of four brothers. Both parents came from wealthy families
reduced to genteel poverty by the Civil War. A
great-grandfather, Col. William Falkner (as the family spelled
its name), had authored The White Rose of Memphis, a popular
success of the 1880s. William's father owned a hardware store
and livery stable in Oxford and later became business manager of
the state university. William attended public school only
fitfully after the fifth grade; he never graduated from high
school.
In 1918, after the U.S. Army rejected him for being underweight
and too short (5 feet 5 inches), Faulkner enlisted in the
Canadian Air Force. During his brief service in World War I, he
suffered a leg injury in a plane accident. In 1918 he was
demobilized and made an honorary second lieutenant.
In 1919 Faulkner enrolled at the University of Mississippi as a
special student but left the next year for New York City. After
several odd jobs in New York and Mississippi, he became
postmaster at the Mississippi University Station; he was fired
in 1924. In 1925 he and a friend made a walking tour of Europe,
returning home in 1926.
During the years 1926-1930 Faulkner published a series of
distinguished novels, none commercially successful. But in 1931
the success of Sanctuary, written expressly to make money, freed
him of financial worries. He went to Hollywood for a year as a
scenarist and an adviser.
It was not until after World War II that Faulkner received
critical acclaim. French critics recognized his power first;
André Malraux wrote an appreciative preface to Sanctuary, and
Jean Paul Sartre wrote a long critical essay on Faulkner. The
turning point for Faulkner's reputation came in 1946, when
Malcolm Cowley published the influential The Portable Faulkner
(at this time all of Faulkner's books were out of print!).
The groundswell of praise for Faulkner's work culminated in a
1950 Nobel Prize for literature. His 1955 lecture tour of Japan
is recorded in Faulkner at Nagano (1956). In 1957-1958 he was
writer-in-residence at the University of Virginia; his dialogues
with students make up Faulkner in the University (1959). William
Faulkner: Essays, Speeches and Public Letters (1965) and The
Faulkner-Cowley File (1966) offer further insights into the man.
Faulkner had married Estelle Oldham in 1929, and they lived
together in Oxford until his death on July 6, 1962. He was a
quiet, dapper, courteous man, mustachioed and sharp-eyed. He
steadfastly refused the role of celebrity: he permitted no
prying into his private life and rarely granted interviews.
Poetry and Short Stories
During the early 1920s Faulkner wrote poetry and fiction. In the
volume of verse The Marble Faun (1922), a printer's error
allegedly introduced the "u" into the author's name, which he
decided to retain. The money for another book of poems, The
Green Bough (1933), was supplied by a lawyer friend, Philip
Stone, on whom the lawyer in Faulkner's later fiction is modeled.
Faulkner's poetry shows the poet's taste for language but lacks
stylistic discipline.
Faulkner is considered a fine practitioner of the short-story
form, and some of his stories, such as "A Rose for Emily," are
widely anthologized. His collections - These Thirteen (1931),
Doctor Martino and Other Stories (1934), Go Down, Moses and
Other Stories (1942), and Knight's Gambit (1949) - deal with
themes similar to those in his novels and include many of the
same characters.
Early Novels
Soldiers' Pay (1926) and Mosquitoes (1927) precede Sartoris
(1927), Faulkner's first important work, in which he begins his
Yoknapatawpha saga. This saga, Faulkner's imaginative recreation
of the tragedy of the American South, is a Balzacian provincial
cycle in which each novel interrelates, clarifies, and redefines
the characters. The central figure is Bayard Sartoris, returned
from the war, who drives and drinks violently to compensate for
his sense of alienation. He seems determined to find some
extraordinary form of self-destruction. He becomes an
experimental aviator and dies in a crash, leaving his pregnant
wife to sustain the family name. The novel introduces families
that reappear in many of Faulkner's novels and stories: the
Sartoris and Compson families, representing the agrarian,
aristocratic Old South; and the Snopes clan, representing the
ruthless, mercantile New South.
"The Sound and the Fury"
The book generally regarded as Faulkner's masterpiece, The Sound
and the Fury (1929), is a radical departure from conventional
novelistic form. It uses a stream-of-consciousness method,
rendering a different type of mentality in each of its four
sections. The title, taken from Macbeth's utterance of cosmic
despair in Shakespeare's play, is a clue to the profound
pessimism of the novel, which records the decay and degeneracy
of the Compson family and, by implication, of the aristocratic
South. It is difficult to read, and Faulkner's "Appendix,"
written much later at the publisher's request, hardly clarifies
it.
Each section takes place in a single day; three sections are set
in 1928 and one in 1910. The difficulties begin with the fact
that the 1910 section is placed second in the book, and the
other three are not sequential in their 1928 three-day span.
Further, the opening section is rendered in the stream of
consciousness of an idiot, who cannot distinguish past from
present.
Unquestionably the most difficult for Faulkner to write, the
Benjy section (of April 7, 1928) is also the most difficult to
read. It has been likened to a prose poem, with the succeeding
three sections being simply variations on its theme of futility.
Because the mentally impaired Benjy lives in a state of
timelessness, his report is purely sensuous, and the reader must
figure out his own chronology. Faulkner gives two aids: the
device of signaling time shifts by alternating the typeface
between bold and italic, and the variance of the African
American attending Benjy (Roskus and Dilsey ca. 1898; Versh, T.P.,
and Frony ca. 1910; Luster ca. 1928).
Out of Benjy's garbled report come a number of facts and motifs.
He is 33 years old, in the constant care of an African American
youth named Luster. Benjy is tormented by the absence of his
sister, Candace, though she has been out of the household for 18
years; each time he hears golfers on the neighboring course call
"Caddy!" (coincidentally her nickname), he is painfully reminded
of her. The golf course, formerly part of the Compson estate,
was sold so that Benjy's older brother, Quentin, could attend
Harvard, where he committed suicide in 1910. Mrs. Compson is a
self-pitying woman; Mr. Compson was a drunkard; Uncle Maury was
a womanizer; Candace was sexually promiscuous and, in turn, her
daughter, confusingly called Quentin (after her dead uncle), is
also promiscuous. Benjy has been castrated at his brother
Jason's order.
Ironically, the most sensitive and intelligent Compson, Quentin
(whose day in the novel is June 1, 1910), shares Benjy's
obsession about their sister. Candace and the past dominate
Quentin's section, which is set in Boston on the day he commits
suicide. His musings add more facts in the novel's mosaic. The
head of the family, Mr. Compson, is wise but cynical and
despairing. Quentin has falsely confessed incest with Candace to
his father; the father has not believed him. Quentin had fought
one of Candace's lovers over her "honor." He is oppressed by
knowing that the pregnant Candace is to be married off to a
northern banker; the impending marriage is symbolic to Quentin
of his irremediable and intolerable severance from Candace and
is the reason for his suicidal state. Quentin's ludicrously
methodical preparations for his suicide culminate when the last
thing he does before leaving to kill himself is brush his teeth.
Jason (his day in the novel is April 6, 1928) is one of the
great comic villains of literature. He has an irrational,
jealous loathing of Candace. Now head of the family, he
complains bitterly of his responsibilities as guardian of
Candace's daughter, Quentin, while systematically stealing the
money Candace sends for her care. Jason is cast in the Snopes
mold - materialistic, greedy, and cunning. What makes him
humorous is his self-pity. He sees himself as victim - of
Candace, who he feels has cost him a desired job; of his niece,
whose promiscuity seems a personal affront; of Benjy, whose
condition causes embarrassment; of Mrs. Compson, whom he
constantly bullies and whose inefficiency has burdened him; of
the Jews, whom he blames for his stock market losses; of the
servants, whose employment necessitates his own work at a menial
job. Jason's lack of soul is evident in all his habits. He
leaves no mark on anything and lives totally in the present -
the perfect Philistine of the New South.
The novel's final section, the only one told in the third
person, gives the point of view of the sensible old black
servant, Dilsey (her day is April 8, 1928). As with other
Faulkner African Americans, her presence is chiefly functional:
her good sense and solidity point up the decadence of the
whites. In this section Jason meets with an ironic, overwhelming
defeat. The novel's chief social implication is that the South
is doomed.
Novels of the 1930s
As I Lay Dying (1930) is a farcical burlesque epic, again using
the multiple stream-of-consciousness method to tell the
grotesque, humorous story of a family of poor whites intent on
fulfilling the mother's deathbed request for burial. Sanctuary
(1931), taken seriously by most critics, was discounted by
Faulkner as a "potboiler." It is the lurid tale of Popeye, a
sexually mutilated bootlegger, who has degenerate sexual acts
performed for his gratification. One of his victims is a college
girl whose lie in Popeye's behalf at the trial of another
bootlegger results in the latter's conviction of Popeye's crime.
In an ironic ending, Popeye is hanged for a crime of which he is
innocent.
The story in Light in August (1932) takes place in a single day.
It is overly complicated by a subplot. Beginning with a pregnant
girl searching for her lover, this plot is subordinated to the
story of Joe Christmas (same initials as Jesus Christ), whose
uncertain racial identity perplexes him. Though structurally
unsound, Light in August generates enormous power and probably
ranks second among Faulkner's books.
Late Novels
Faulkner's creativity ebbed after 1935. Though occasionally
interesting and fitfully brilliant, his work tended to be
increasingly repetitious, perverse, and mannered to the point of
self-parody.
Pylon (1935), one of Faulkner's weakest novels, is the story of
a flying circus team. Absalom, Absalom! (1936) is an extremely
complex novel; the title comes from the biblical cry of David
("My son, my son!"). This novel tells of a poor white from the
Virginia hills who marries an aristocractic Mississippi woman,
inadvertently launching a three-generation family cycle of
violence, degeneracy, and mental retardation.
Two minor novels, The Unvanquished (1938) and The Wild Palms
(1939), were followed by an uneven but intriguing satire of the
Snopes clan, The Hamlet (1940). Of this novel's four parts, the
first and the last manifest Faulkner's greatest faults: they are
talky and oblique and seem out of focus. The middle sections,
however, are Faulkner at his best.
Intruder in the Dust (1948) takes a liberal view of southern
race relations. Lucas Beauchamp, an eccentric old African
American, is saved from a false murder charge through the
efforts of fair-minded whites. A Fable (1954) is a very poor
parable of Christ and Judas. The Town (1957), The Mansion
(1959), and The Reivers (1962), a trilogy that is part of the
Yoknapatawpha saga, are generally regarded as minor works.
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This web page was last updated on:
10 December, 2008
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