Soldier's Pay

Soldier's Pay
Author: William Faulkner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 496
Release: 1987
Genre: Manuscripts, American
ISBN:

Soldiers' Pay

Soldiers' Pay
Author: William Faulkner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1987
Genre: Manuscripts, American
ISBN:

William Faulkner

William Faulkner
Author: Hyatt H. Waggoner
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2021-09-15
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0813182220

Combining explications of William Faulkner's novels and short stories with thematic analysis, Hyatt H. Waggoner works from the close reading of a specific work outward to its most general meanings and relationships. By this method he has made a significant contribution to the understanding of Faulkner's career and artistic achievement. Waggoner examines both better and lesser-known works, which yield valuable insights into Faulkner's development when treated in relation to his whole body of work. The author also addresses the major themes which emerge from critical analyses of individual works: Faulkner's uneasy relationship with his Christian background and his unchanging conception of the role of the artist related to his changing practice as a writer. Waggoner concludes that Faulkner's artistic career reflects a creatively productive, but tortured and ambiguous, relationship with his community.

William Faulkner

William Faulkner
Author: Martin Kreiswirth
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2008-11-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0820333611

Martin Kreiswirth challenges the accepted notion that The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner's fourth and possibly finest novel, represented an unprecedented turning point in the writer's literary career, a quantum leap in his imaginative development. He argues that Faulkner's earlier work, both published and unpublished, not only distinctly prefigured techniques, narrative strategies, and creative procedures used in the writing of his fourth novel, but also provided him with materials and methods to which he could return. Viewed in the context of his literary development, the author says, the writing of The Sound and the Fury constituted for Faulkner not so much a mysterious leap as a moment of initiation; it marks that crucial point in his career at which he revisited his past, saw it anew, and reworked it into his future. Focusing his attention on the works that preceded The Sound and the Fury--and specifically on the strategies and conventions that informed those works--Kreiswirth reassesses Faulkner's imaginative growth and offers new insights into the place and significance of The Sound and the Fury itself. He provides detailed analyses of such works as the New Orleans short fiction, the abandoned novel Elmer, Mosquitoes, Flags in the Dust, and particularly Faulkner's neglected first novel, Soldier's Pay. These texts are reexamined not only as anticipations of later developments but as literary achievements in their own right.