Sunday, June 2, 2019
As I Lay Dying :: essays research papers
William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi where he became a high school dispatch out and was forced to work with grandfather at a bank. In 1925 Faulkner moved to New Orleans and worked as a journalist, here he met the American Sherwood Andersen, a famous nobble-story writer. Anderson convinced Faulkner that writing about the people and places he could identify with would improve his career as a writer. After a expedition to Europe, Faulkner began to write of the fictitious Yoknapatawpha County, which was representative of Lafayette County, Mississippi. Often in this series of novels one could read of characters who were based on Faulkners ancestors, African Americans, Native Americans, hermits, and poor whites. At some point in this period of writing, around 1930, William Faulkner wrote the novel As I Lay Dying.In this book, and others of this series, it was commonplace to find sentences that stretched on for a summon in order to create mood, multiple narrators, or sh ort stories complicated with a stream-of-consciousness blather that was hard to understand. Therefore, readers had difficulty following these novels, and Faulkners popularity soon dwindled, that is until Malcolm Cowley wrote The take-away Faulkner, which contained excerpts from the Yoknapatawpha series, and made Faulkners genius evident to his readers. Shortly thereafter, many of Faulkners works were reissued and he became a literary giant, and was even awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1949. Until death, Faulkner continued to create works of literature, including both short stories and novels.The Bundren family has recently suffered the loss of their most beloved mother, Addie. When Addie was young and fresh out of labor with her second of fiver children, she made her husband promise that when she died he would burry her in Jefferson, the town where Addies family lived. Generally Jefferson was a one or two day trip, provided when a rain spell floods the river and destroy s both bridges and washes out the direct road to Jefferson, Anse, Addies husband has to ford the river and take a much long-dated route to get to Jefferson. While crossing the river, a large log flowing downstream starts a chain reaction that results in a in earnest battered wagon, the death of a team of mules, a broken leg for the oldest of the five children, and a one-day delay in the journey. Many other troubles follow this family and the short trip to bury their mother becomes a nine-day journey with a dead body that is beginning to rot in the back of the wagon.
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