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William Faulkner

William Cuthbert Faulkner (/ˈfɔːknər/;[1][2] September 25, 1897 – July 6, 1962) was an American writer known for his novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, based on Lafayette County, Mississippi, where Faulkner spent most of his life. A Nobel laureate, Faulkner is one of the most celebrated writers of American literature and often is considered the greatest writer of Southern literature.

William Faulkner
Faulkner in 1954, photographed by Carl Van Vechten
BornWilliam Cuthbert Falkner
(1897-09-25)September 25, 1897
New Albany, Mississippi, U.S.
DiedJuly 6, 1962(1962-07-06) (aged 64)
Byhalia, Mississippi, U.S.
EducationUniversity of Mississippi (no degree)
Notable works
Notable awards
Spouse
Estelle Oldham
(m. 1929)
Signature

Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi, and his family moved to Oxford, Mississippi, when he was a child. With the outbreak of World War I, he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force, but did not serve in combat. Returning to Oxford, he attended the University of Mississippi for three semesters before dropping out. He moved to New Orleans, where he wrote his first novel Soldiers' Pay (1925). He went back to Oxford and wrote Sartoris (1927), his first work set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County. In 1929, he published The Sound and the Fury. The following year, he wrote As I Lay Dying. Later that decade, he wrote Light in August, Absalom, Absalom! and The Wild Palms. He also worked as a screenwriter, contributing to Howard Hawks's To Have and Have Not and The Big Sleep adapted from The Big Sleep, a novel by Raymond Chandler; the former film, adapted from a novel by Ernest Hemingway, is the only film with contributions by two Nobel laureates.[3]

Faulkner's renown reached its peak upon the publication of Malcolm Cowley's The Portable Faulkner and his being awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature for "his powerful and unique contribution to the modern American novel."[4] He is the only Mississippi-born Nobel laureate. Two of his works, A Fable (1954) and The Reivers (1962), won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Faulkner died from a heart attack on July 6, 1962, following a fall from his horse the month before. Ralph Ellison called him "the greatest artist the South has produced".

Life edit

Childhood and heritage edit

 
Faulkner was influenced by stories of his great-grandfather and namesake William Clark Falkner.

William Cuthbert Falkner was born on September 25, 1897, in New Albany, Mississippi,[5] the first of four sons of Murry Cuthbert Falkner (1870–1932) and Maud Butler (1871–1960).[6] His family was upper middle-class, but "not quite of the old feudal cotton aristocracy".[7] After Maud rejected Murry's plan to become a rancher in Texas,[8] the family moved to Oxford, Mississippi in 1902,[9] where Faulkner's father established a livery stable and hardware store before becoming the University of Mississippi's business manager.[10][9] Except for short periods elsewhere, Faulkner lived in Oxford for the rest of his life.[6][11]

Faulkner spent his boyhood listening to stories told to him by his elders including those about the Civil War, slavery, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Faulkner family.[12] Young William was greatly influenced by the history of his family and the region in which he lived. Mississippi marked his sense of humor, his sense of the tragic position of "black and white" Americans, his characterization of Southern characters, and his timeless themes, including fiercely intelligent people who are dwelling behind the façades of good ol' boys and simpletons.[13] He was particularly influenced by stories of his great-grandfather William Clark Falkner, who had become a near legendary figure in North Mississippi. Born into poverty, the elder Falkner was a strict disciplinarian and was a Confederate colonel. Tried and acquitted twice on charges of murder, he became a member of the Mississippi House and became a part-owner of a railroad before being murdered by his co-owner. Faulkner incorporated many aspects of his great-grandfather's biography into his later works.[14]

Faulkner initially excelled in school and skipped the second grade. However, beginning somewhere in the fourth and fifth grades, he became a much quieter and more withdrawn child. He occasionally played truant and became indifferent about schoolwork. Instead, he took an interest in studying the history of Mississippi. The decline of his performance in school continued, and Faulkner wound up repeating the eleventh and twelfth grades, never graduating from high school.[12] As a teenager in Oxford, Faulkner dated Estelle Oldham (1897–1972), the popular daughter of Major Lemuel and Lida Oldham, and he also believed he would marry her.[15] However, Estelle dated other boys during their romance, and, in 1918, Cornell Franklin (five years Faulkner's senior) proposed marriage to her before Faulkner did. She accepted.[16][note 1]

Trip to the North and early writings edit

 
Cadet Faulkner in Toronto, 1918

When he was 17, Faulkner met Phil Stone, who became an important early influence on his writing. Stone was four years his senior and came from one of Oxford's older families; he was passionate about literature and had bachelor's degrees from Yale and the University of Mississippi. Stone read and was impressed by some of Faulkner's early poetry, becoming one of the first to recognize and encourage Faulkner's talent. Stone mentored the young Faulkner, introducing him to the works of writers like James Joyce, who influenced Faulkner's own writing. In his early 20s, Faulkner gave poems and short stories he had written to Stone in hopes of their being published. Stone sent these to publishers, but they were uniformly rejected.[17] In spring 1918, Faulkner traveled to live with Stone at Yale, his first trip to the North.[18] Through Stone, Faulkner met writers like Sherwood Anderson, Robert Frost, and Ezra Pound.[19]

Faulkner attempted to join the US Army. There are accounts of this that indicate he was rejected for being under weight and his short stature of 5'5".[19] Other accounts purport to prove that the aforementioned accounts are false.[20]Although he initially planned to join the British Army in hopes of being commissioned as an officer,[21] Faulkner then joined the Canadian RAF with a forged letter of reference and left Yale to receive training in Toronto.[22] Records indicate that Faulkner was never actually a member of the British Royal Flying Corps and never saw active service during the First World War.[23] Despite claiming so in his letters, Faulkner did not receive cockpit training or ever fly.[24] Returning to Oxford in December 1918, Faulkner told acquaintances false war-stories and even faked a war wound.[25]

In 1918, Faulkner's surname changed from "Falkner" to "Faulkner". According to one story, a careless typesetter made an error. When the misprint appeared on the title page of his first book, Faulkner was asked whether he wanted the change. He supposedly replied, "Either way suits me."[26] In adolescence, Faulkner began writing poetry almost exclusively. He did not write his first novel until 1925. His literary influences are deep and wide. He once stated that he modeled his early writing on the Romantic era in late 18th- and early 19th-century England.[6]

He attended the University of Mississippi, enrolling in 1919, studying for three semesters before dropping out in November 1920.[27] Faulkner joined the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, and pursued his dream to become a writer.[28] He skipped classes often and received a "D" grade in English. However, some of his poems were published in campus publications.[17][29] In 1922, his poem "Portrait" was published in the New Orleans literary magazine Double Dealer. The magazine published his "New Orleans" short story collection three years later.[30] After dropping out, he took a series of odd jobs: at a New York City bookstore, as a carpenter in Oxford, and as the Ole Miss postmaster. He resigned from the post office with the declaration: "I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp."[31]

New Orleans and early novels edit

 
 
Publicity photographs of Faulkner, summer 1924
 
During part of his time in New Orleans, Faulkner lived in a house in the French Quarter (pictured center yellow).

While most writers of Faulkner's generation traveled to and lived in Europe, Faulkner remained writing in the United States.[32] Faulkner spent the first half of 1925 in New Orleans, Louisiana, where many bohemian artists and writers lived, specifically in the French Quarter where Faulkner lived beginning in March.[33] During his time in New Orleans, Faulkner's focus drifted from poetry to prose and his literary style made a marked transition from Victorian to modernist.[34] The Times-Picayune published several of his short works of prose.[35]

After being directly influenced by Sherwood Anderson, Faulkner wrote his first novel, Soldiers' Pay,[6] in New Orleans. Soldiers' Pay and his other early works were written in a style similar to contemporaries Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald, at times nearly exactly appropriating phrases.[36] Anderson assisted in the publication of Soldiers' Pay and Mosquitoes by recommending them to his publisher.[37]

The miniature house at 624 Pirate's Alley, just around the corner from St. Louis Cathedral in New Orleans, is now the site of Faulkner House Books, where it also serves as the headquarters of the Pirate's Alley Faulkner Society.[38]

During the summer of 1927, Faulkner wrote his first novel set in his fictional Yoknapatawpha County, titled Flags in the Dust. This novel drew heavily from the traditions and history of the South, in which Faulkner had been engrossed in his youth. He was extremely proud of the novel upon its completion and he believed it a significant step up from his previous two novels—however, when submitted for publication to Boni & Liveright, it was rejected. Faulkner was devastated by this rejection but he eventually allowed his literary agent, Ben Wasson, to edit the text, and the novel was published in 1929 as Sartoris.[29][37][note 2] The work was notable in that it was his first novel that dealt with the Civil War rather than the contemporary emphasis on World War I and its legacy.[39]

The Sound and the Fury edit

 
The Sound and the Fury (1929)

In autumn 1928, just after his 31st birthday, Faulkner began working on The Sound and the Fury. He started by writing three short stories about a group of children with the last name Compson, but soon began to feel that the characters he had created might be better suited for a full-length novel. Perhaps as a result of disappointment in the initial rejection of Flags in the Dust, Faulkner had now become indifferent to his publishers and wrote this novel in a much more experimental style. In describing the writing process for this work, Faulkner later said, "One day I seemed to shut the door between me and all publisher's addresses and book lists. I said to myself, 'Now I can write.'"[40] After its completion, Faulkner insisted that Wasson not do any editing or add any punctuation for clarity.[29]

1929–1931 edit

In 1929, Faulkner married Estelle Oldham, with Andrew Kuhn serving as best man at the wedding. Estelle brought with her two children from her previous marriage to Cornell Franklin and Faulkner hoped to support his new family as a writer. Faulkner and Estelle later had a daughter, Jill, in 1933. He began writing As I Lay Dying in 1929 while working night shifts at the University of Mississippi Power House. The novel was published in 1930.[41]

Beginning in 1930, Faulkner sent some of his short stories to various national magazines. Several of these were published and brought him enough income to buy a house in Oxford for his family, which he named Rowan Oak.[42] Fueled by a desire to make money, Faulkner wrote Sanctuary.[43] With limited royalties from his work, he published short stories in magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post to supplement his income.[44]

Light in August and Hollywood years edit

 
Light in August (1932)

By 1932, Faulkner was in need of money. He asked Wasson to sell the serialization rights for his newly completed novel, Light in August, to a magazine for $5,000, but none accepted the offer. Then MGM Studios offered Faulkner work as a screenwriter in Hollywood. Faulkner was not an avid movie goer and had reservations about working in the movie industry. As André Bleikasten comments, he "was in dire need of money and had no idea how to get it…So he went to Hollywood."[45] It has been noted that authors like Faulkner were not always hired for their writing prowess but "to enhance the prestige of the …writers who hired them."[45] He arrived in Culver City, California, in May 1932. The job began a sporadic relationship with moviemaking and with California, which was difficult but he endured in order to earn "a consistent salary that supported his family back home."[46]

Initially, he declared a desire to work on Mickey Mouse cartoons, not realizing that they were produced by Walt Disney Productions and not MGM.[47] His first screenplay was for Today We Live, an adaptation of his short story "Turnabout", which received a mixed response. He then wrote a screen adaptation of Sartoris that was never produced.[44] From 1932 to 1954, Faulkner worked on around 50 films.[48] In early 1944, Faulkner wrote a screenplay adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's novel To Have and Have Not.[49] The film was the first starring Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart. Bogart and Bacall would star in Hawks's The Big Sleep, another film Faulkner worked on.[50]

Faulkner was highly critical of what he found in Hollywood, and he wrote letters that were "scathing in tone, painting a miserable portrait of a literary artist imprisoned in a cultural Babylon."[51] Many scholars have brought attention to the dilemma he experienced and that the predicament had caused him serious unhappiness.[52][46][53] In Hollywood he worked with director Howard Hawks, with whom he quickly developed a friendship, as they both enjoyed drinking and hunting. Howard Hawks' brother, William Hawks, became Faulkner's Hollywood agent. Faulkner continued to find reliable work as a screenwriter from the 1930s to the 1950s.[37][42] While staying in Hollywood, Faulkner adopted a "vagrant" lifestyle, living in brief stints in hotels like the Garden of Allah Hotel and frequenting the bar at the Roosevelt Hotel and the Musso & Frank Grill where he was said to have regularly gone behind the bar to mix his own Mint Juleps.[54][55] He had an extramarital affair with Hawks' secretary and script girl, Meta Carpenter.[56]

With the onset of World War II, in 1942, Faulkner tried to join the United States Air Force but was rejected. He instead worked on local civil defense.[57] The war drained Faulkner of his enthusiasm. He described the war as "bad for writing".[58] Amid this creative slowdown, in 1943, Faulkner began work on a new novel that merged World War I's Unknown Soldier with the Passion of Christ. Published over a decade later as A Fable, it won the 1954 Pulitzer Prize.[59][60] The award for A Fable was a controversial political choice. The jury had selected Milton Lott's The Last Hunt for the prize, but Pulitzer Prize Administrator Professor John Hohenberg convinced the Pulitzer board that Faulkner was long overdue for the award, despite A Fable being a lesser work of his, and the board overrode the jury's selection, much to the disgust of its members.[61]

By the time of The Portable Faulkner's publication, most of his novels had been out of print.[32]

Nobel Prize and later years edit

 
Faulkner in 1954

Faulkner was awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature for "his powerful and artistically unique contribution to the modern American novel".[62] It was awarded at the following year's banquet along with the 1950 Prize to Bertrand Russell.[63]

When Faulkner visited Stockholm in December 1950 to receive the Nobel Prize, he met Else Jonsson (1912–1996), who was the widow of journalist Thorsten Jonsson (1910–1950). Jonsson, a reporter for Dagens Nyheter from 1943 to 1946, had interviewed Faulkner in 1946 and introduced his works to Swedish readers. Faulkner and Else had an affair that lasted until the end of 1953. At the banquet where they met in 1950, publisher Tor Bonnier introduced Else as the widow of the man responsible for Faulkner winning the Nobel prize.[64]

Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech on the immortality of the artists, although brief, contained a number of allusions and references to other literary works.[65] However, Faulkner detested the fame and glory that resulted from his recognition. His aversion was so great that his 17-year-old daughter learned of the Nobel Prize only when she was called to the principal's office during the school day.[66] He began by saying: "I feel that this award was not made to me as a man, but to my work – a life's work in the agony and sweat of the human spirit, not for glory and least of all for profit, but to create out of the materials of the human spirit something which did not exist before. So this award is only mine in trust. It will not be difficult to find a dedication for the money part of it commensurate with the purpose and significance of its origin."[67] He donated part of his Nobel money "to establish a fund to support and encourage new fiction writers", eventually resulting in the William Faulkner Foundation (1960–1970).

In 1951, Faulkner received the Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur medal from the government of France.[68]

Faulkner served as the first Writer-in-Residence at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville from February to June 1957 and again in 1958.[69][70]

In 1961, Faulkner began writing his nineteenth and final novel, The Reivers. The novel is a nostalgic reminiscence, in which an elderly grandfather relates a humorous episode in which he and two boys stole a car to drive to a Memphis bordello. In summer 1961, he finished the first draft.[71] During this time, he injured himself in a series of falls.[72]

On June 17, 1962, Faulkner suffered a serious injury in a fall from his horse, which led to thrombosis. He suffered a fatal heart attack on July 6, 1962, at the age of 64, at Wright's Sanatorium in Byhalia, Mississippi.[6][11] Faulkner is buried with his family in St. Peter's Cemetery in Oxford.[73]

Writing edit

 
One of Faulkner's typewriters

From the early 1920s to the outbreak of World War II, Faulkner published 13 novels and many short stories. This body of work formed the basis of his reputation and earned him the Nobel Prize at age 52. Faulkner's prodigious output include celebrated novels such as The Sound and the Fury (1929), As I Lay Dying (1930), Light in August (1932), and Absalom, Absalom! (1936). He was also a prolific writer of short stories.

Faulkner's first short story collection, These 13 (1931), includes many of his most acclaimed (and most frequently anthologized) stories, including "A Rose for Emily", "Red Leaves", "That Evening Sun", and "Dry September". He set many of his short stories and novels in Yoknapatawpha County—which was based on and nearly geographically identical to Lafayette County (of which his hometown of Oxford, Mississippi, is the county seat). Yoknapatawpha was Faulkner's "postage stamp", and the bulk of work that it represents is widely considered by critics to amount to one of the most monumental fictional creations in the history of literature. Three of his novels, The Hamlet, The Town and The Mansion, known collectively as the Snopes trilogy, document the town of Jefferson and its environs, as an extended family headed by Flem Snopes insinuates itself into the lives and psyches of the general populace.[74] Yoknapatawpha County has been described as a mental landscape.[75]

His short story "A Rose for Emily" was his first story published in a major magazine, the Forum, but received little attention from the public. After revisions and reissues, it gained popularity and is now considered one of his best.

Faulkner wrote two volumes of poetry which were published in small printings, The Marble Faun (1924), and A Green Bough (1933), and a collection of mystery stories, Knight's Gambit (1949).

Style and technique edit

The peacefullest words. Peacefullest words. Non fui. Sum. Fui. Non sum. Somewhere I heard bells once. Mississippi or Massachusetts. I was. I am not. Massachusetts or Mississippi. Shreve has a bottle in his trunk. Aren't you even going to open it Mr and Mrs Jason Richmond Compson announce the Three times. Days. Aren't you even going to open it marriage of their daughter Candace that liquor teaches you to confuse the means with the end I am. Drink. I was not. Let us sell Benjy's pasture so that Quentin may go to Harvard and I may knock my bones together and together. I will be dead in. Was it one year Caddy said.

— An example of Faulkner's prose in The Sound and the Fury (1929)

Faulkner was known for his experimental style with meticulous attention to diction and cadence. In contrast to the minimalist understatement of his contemporary Ernest Hemingway, Faulkner made frequent use of stream of consciousness in his writing, and wrote often highly emotional, subtle, cerebral, complex, and sometimes Gothic or grotesque stories of a wide variety of characters including former slaves or descendants of slaves, poor white, agrarian, or working-class Southerners, and Southern aristocrats.

Faulkner's contemporary critical reception was mixed, with The New York Times noting that many critics regarded his work as "raw slabs of pseudorealism that had relatively little merit as serious writing".[7] His style has been described as "impenetrably convoluted".[32]

In an interview with The Paris Review in 1956, Faulkner remarked:

Let the writer take up surgery or bricklaying if he is interested in technique. There is no mechanical way to get the writing done, no shortcut. The young writer would be a fool to follow a theory. Teach yourself by your own mistakes; people learn only by error. The good artist believes that nobody is good enough to give him advice. He has supreme vanity. No matter how much he admires the old writer, he wants to beat him.

In that same interview, Jean Stein says "Some people say they can't understand your writing, even after they read it two or three times. What approach would you suggest for them?" Faulkner replies: "Read it four times."

When asked about his influences, Faulkner says "the books I read are the ones I knew and loved when I was a young man and to which I return as you do to old friends: the Old Testament, Dickens, Conrad, Cervantes, Don QuixoteI read that every year, as some do the Bible. Flaubert, Balzac—he created an intact world of his own, a bloodstream running through twenty books—Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Shakespeare. I read Melville occasionally and, of the poets, Marlowe, Campion, Jonson, Herrick, Donne, Keats, and Shelley."[76]

Like his contemporaries James Joyce and T. S. Eliot, Faulkner uses stories and themes from classic literature in a modern context. Joyce, in Ulysses, modeled the journey of his hero Leopold Bloom on the adventures of Odysseus. Eliot, in his essay "Ulysses, Order and Myth", wrote that "In using the myth, in manipulating a continuous parallel between contemporaneity and antiquity, Mr. Joyce is pursuing a method which others must pursue after him. They will not be imitators, any more than the scientist who uses the discoveries of an Einstein in pursuing his own, independent, further investigations. It is simply a way of controlling, of ordering, of giving a shape and a significance to the immense panorama of futility and anarchy which is contemporary history."[77] Faulkner's allusions to earlier authors are evidenced by his titles; the title of The Sound and the Fury comes from Macbeth's soliloquy: "it is a tale/ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,/ Signifying nothing." The opening of the novel is told from the perspective of the intellectually disabled Benjy Compson. The title of As I Lay Dying comes from Homer's Odyssey, where it is spoken by Agamemnon in the past tense: "As I lay dying, the woman with the dog's eyes would not close my eyes as I descended into Hades." Faulkner's novel, in contrast, is narrated in the present tense.[78] The title of Go Down, Moses is from an African American spiritual, and the book is dedicated "To Mammy / Caroline Barr / Mississippi / [1840–1940] Who was born in slavery and who gave to my family a fidelity without stint or calculation of recompense and to my childhood an immeasurable devotion and love."[79]

Themes and analysis edit

Faulkner's work has been examined by many critics from a wide variety of critical perspectives, including his position on slavery in the South and his view that desegregation was not an idea to be forced, arguing desegregation should "go slow" so as not to upend the southern way of life.[citation needed] The essayist and novelist James Baldwin was highly critical of his views around integration.[80] Ralph Ellison said that "No one in American fiction has done so much to explore the types of Negro personality as has Faulkner."[81]

The New Critics became interested in Faulkner's work, with Cleanth Brooks writing The Yoknapatawpha Country and Michael Millgate writing The Achievement of William Faulkner. Since then, critics have looked at Faulkner's work using other approaches, such as feminist and psychoanalytic methods.[37][82] Faulkner's works have been placed within the literary traditions of modernism and the Southern Renaissance.[83]

French philosopher Albert Camus wrote that Faulkner successfully imported classical tragedy into the 20th century through his "interminably unwinding spiral of words and sentences that conducts the speaker to the abyss of sufferings buried in the past".[84]

Legacy edit

 
Faulkner's home Rowan Oak is maintained by the University of Mississippi.
 
A Parisian street named for Faulkner

Influence edit

Faulkner is a towering figure in Southern literature; Flannery O'Connor wrote that "the presence alone of Faulkner in our midst makes a great difference in what the writer can and cannot permit himself to do. Nobody wants his mule and wagon stalled on the same track the Dixie Limited is roaring down".[85] In 1943, while working at Warner Brothers, Faulkner wrote a letter of encouragement to a young Mississippi writer, Eudora Welty.[86] According to critic and translator Valerie Miles, Faulkner's influence on Latin American fiction is considerable, with fictional worlds created by Gabriel García Márquez (Macondo) and Juan Carlos Onetti (Santa Maria) being "very much in the vein of" Yoknapatawpha, and that "Carlos Fuentes's The Death of Artemio Cruz wouldn't exist if not for As I Lay Dying".[87] Fuentes himself cited Faulkner as one of the writers most important to him.[88] Faulkner had great influence on Mario Vargas Llosa, particularly on his early novels The Time of the Hero, The Green House and Conversation in the Cathedral. Vargas Llosa has claimed that during his student years he learned more from Yoknapatawpha than from classes.[89] Jorge Luis Borges translated Faulkner's The Wild Palms into Spanish.[90]

The works of William Faulkner are a clear influence on the French novelist Claude Simon,[91] and the Portuguese novelist António Lobo Antunes.[92] Cormac McCarthy has been described as a "disciple of Faulkner".[93]

In The Elements of Style, E. B. White cites Faulkner: "If the experiences of Walter Mitty, of Dick Diver, of Rabbit Angstrom have seemed for the moment real to countless readers, if in reading Faulkner we have almost the sense of inhabiting Yoknapatawpha County during the decline of the South, it is because the details used are definite, the terms concrete." Later, Faulkner's style is contrasted with that of Hemingway.[94]

After his death, Estelle and their daughter, Jill, lived at Rowan Oak until Estelle's death in 1972. The property was sold to the University of Mississippi that same year. The house and furnishings are maintained much as they were in Faulkner's day. Faulkner's scribblings are preserved on the wall, including the day-by-day outline covering a week he wrote on the walls of his small study to help him keep track of the plot twists in his novel A Fable.[95] Some of Faulkner's Nobel Prize winnings went to establish the William Faulkner Foundation. It gave an Award for Notable First Novel; winners included John Knowles's A Separate Peace, Thomas Pynchon's V., Cormac McCarthy's The Orchard Keeper, Robert Coover's The Origin of the Brunists and Frederick Exley's A Fan's Notes. Starting in 1981, this became the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, founded by, among others, Mary Lee Settle as an alternative to the National Book Award.[96]

Some of Faulkner's works have been adapted into films. They have received a polarized response, with many critics contending that Faulkner's works are "unfilmable".[97] Faulkner's final work, The Reivers, was adapted into a 1969 film starring Steve McQueen.[98] Tommy Lee Jones's neo-Western film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estada was partly based on Faulkner's As I Lay Dying.[99]

During the Nazi Occupation of France in World War II, the German occupiers banned American literature. A black-market of American books emerged, and reading works by Hemingway and Faulkner became an act of defiance.[100] Faulkner remains especially popular in France, where a 2009 poll found him the second most popular writer (after only Marcel Proust). Contemporary Jean-Paul Sartre stated that "for young people in France, Faulkner is a god", and Albert Camus made a stage adaptation of Faulkner's Requiem for a Nun.[101] In Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless, Patricia (Jean Seberg) quotes The Wild Palms: "Between grief and nothing, I will take grief."[102]

He also won the U.S. National Book Award twice, for Collected Stories in 1951[103] and A Fable in 1955.[104]

The United States Postal Service issued a 22-cent postage stamp in his honor on August 3, 1987.[105] Faulkner had once served as Postmaster at the University of Mississippi, and in his letter of resignation in 1923 wrote:

As long as I live under the capitalistic system, I expect to have my life influenced by the demands of moneyed people. But I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp. This, sir, is my resignation.[106]

On October 10, 2019, a Mississippi Writers Trail historical marker was installed at Rowan Oak in Oxford, Mississippi honoring the contributions of William Faulkner to the American literary landscape.[107]

Collections edit

The manuscripts of most of Faulkner's works, correspondence, personal papers, and over 300 books from his working library reside at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia, where he spent much of his time in his final years. The library also houses some of the writer's personal effects and the papers of major Faulkner associates and scholars, such as his biographer Joseph Blotner, bibliographer Linton Massey, and Random House editor Albert Erskine.

Southeast Missouri State University, where the Center for Faulkner Studies is located, also owns a generous collection of Faulkner materials, including first editions, manuscripts, letters, photographs, artwork, and many materials pertaining to Faulkner's time in Hollywood. The university possesses many personal files and letters kept by Joseph Blotner, along with books and letters that once belonged to Malcolm Cowley. The university achieved the collection due to a generous donation by Louis Daniel Brodsky, a collector of Faulkner materials, in 1989.

Further significant Faulkner materials reside at the University of Mississippi, the Harry Ransom Center, and the New York Public Library.

The Random House records at Columbia University also include letters by and to Faulkner.[108][109]

In 1966, the United States Military Academy dedicated a William Faulkner Room in its library.[57]

Selected list of works edit

Filmography edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ He proposed marriage to her before Faulkner did. Her parents insisted she marry Franklin for various reasons: he was an Ole Miss law graduate, had recently been commissioned as a major in the Hawaii Army National Guard, and came from a respectable family with whom they were old friends.[16]
  2. ^ The original version was issued as Flags in the Dust in 1973.

Citations and references edit

  1. ^ . Lexico.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2021.
  2. ^ "Faulkner". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  3. ^ Phillips (1980), p. 50.
  4. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949". NobelPrize.org. from the original on June 2, 2020. Retrieved January 4, 2023.
  5. ^ Minter (1980), p. 1.
  6. ^ a b c d e MWP: William Faulkner (1897–1962) November 1, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, OleMiss.edu; accessed September 26, 2017.
  7. ^ a b "Faulkner's Home, Family and Heritage Were Genesis of Yoknapatawpha County". The New York Times. July 7, 1962. from the original on December 18, 2020. Retrieved June 17, 2021.
  8. ^ Minter (1980), p. 7.
  9. ^ a b Minter (1980), p. 8.
  10. ^ O'Connor (1959), p. 4.
  11. ^ a b William Faulkner on Nobelprize.org  
  12. ^ a b Minter, David L. William Faulkner, His Life and Work. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980; ISBN 0-8018-2347-1
  13. ^ "William Faulkner's Demons". The New Yorker. November 18, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
  14. ^ O'Connor (1959), pp. 4-5.
  15. ^ Parini (2004), pp. 22–29.
  16. ^ a b Parini (2004), pp. 36–37.
  17. ^ a b Coughlan, Robert. The Private World of William Faulkner, New York: Harper & Brothers, 1953 ISBN 0-8154-0424-7
  18. ^ Zeitlin (2016), p. 15.
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"Oppression and Its Effects on the Individual and Society in Faulkner's 'A Rose for Emily'", El-Ruha 5th International Conference on Social Sciences Proceedings Book, Eds. Fethi Demir&Mehmet Recep Taş. ISBN 978-605-80857-7-0. Oct 15, 2019. Tunisia. Pg. 31-38. www.elruha.org.

Works cited edit

  • Bartunek, C. J. (Summer 2017). "The Wasteland Revisited: William Faulkner's First Year in Hollywood". South Atlantic Review. 82 (2): 97–116. JSTOR 90013647. from the original on June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 19, 2021.
  • Camus, Albert (1970). Thody, Philip (ed.). Lyrical and Critical Essays. Translated by Kennedy, Ellen Conroy. Vintange. ISBN 0394708520.
  • Capps, Jack L. (Spring 1966). "West Point's William Faulkner Room". The Georgia Review. 20 (1): 3–8. JSTOR 41396230. from the original on June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 19, 2021.
  • William Faulkner: Novels 1930–1935 (Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk, ed.) (Library of America, 1985) ISBN 978-0-940450-26-4
  • William Faulkner: Novels 1936–1940 (Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk, eds.) (Library of America, 1990) ISBN 978-0-940450-55-4
  • William Faulkner: Novels 1942–1954 (Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk, eds.) (Library of America, 1994) ISBN 978-0-940450-85-1
  • William Faulkner: Novels 1957–1962 (Noel Polk, ed., with notes by Joseph Blotner) (Library of America, 1999) ISBN 978-1-883011-69-7
  • William Faulkner: Novels 1926–1929 (Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk, eds.) (Library of America, 2006) ISBN 978-1-931082-89-1
  • The Portable Faulkner, ed. Malcolm Cowley (Viking Press, 1946). ISBN 978-0-14-243728-5
  • Blotner, Joseph (1974). Faulkner: A Biography (2 vols). Random House.
  • Blotner, Joseph. Faulkner: A Biography. New York: Random House, 1984.
  • Fowler, Doreen, Abadie, Ann. Faulkner and Popular Culture: Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha. Univ. Press of Mississippi, 1990 ISBN 0-87805-434-0, ISBN 978-0-87805-434-3
  • Jaillant, Lise. "'I'm Afraid I've Got Involved With a Nut': New Faulkner Letters." Southern Literary Journal 47.1 (2014): 98–114. May 29, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Kerr, Elizabeth Margaret, and Kerr, Michael M. William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha: A Kind of Keystone in the Universe. Fordham Univ Press, 1985 ISBN 0-8232-1135-5, ISBN 978-0-8232-1135-7
  • Koch, Benjamin (Winter 2007). "The French Quarter Apprentice: William Faulkner's Modernist Evolution". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 48 (1): 55–68. JSTOR 4234243. from the original on June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  • Liénard-Yeterian, Marie. 'Faulkner et le cinéma', Paris: Michel Houdiard Editeur, 2010.ISBN 978-2-35692-037-9
  • Minter, David L. (1980). William Faulkner, his life and work. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801823473.
  • McKay, David (Fall 2009). "Faulkner's First War: Conflict, Mimesis, and the Resonance of Defeat". South Central Review. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 26 (3): 119–130. doi:10.1353/scr.0.0062. JSTOR 40645990. S2CID 144583260. from the original on June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  • Phillips, Gene D. (1980). Hemingway and Film. New York, NY: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0804426954.
  • Sensibar, Judith L. The Origins of Faulkner's Art. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984. ISBN 0-292-79020-1
  • Sensibar, Judith L. Faulkner and Love: The Women Who Shaped His Art, A Biography. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-300-16568-5
  • Sensibar, Judith L. Vision in Spring. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984. ISBN 0-292-78712-X.
  • O'Connor, William Van (1959). William Faulkner. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Parini, Jay (2004). One Matchless Time: A Life of William Faulkner. New York: HarperCollins. pp. 22–29. ISBN 0-06-621072-0.
  • Pikoulis, John (1982). The Art of William Faulkner. Totowa, New Jersey: Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 9780333300947.
  • Rosella Mamoli Zorzi (2000). William Faulkner in Venice : proceedings of the International Conference Language, Stylistics, Translations. Venice: Marsilio. p. 347. ISBN 9788831776264. OCLC 634327206. Archived from the original on September 8, 2019. Retrieved August 20, 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • Rife, David (March 1983). "Rex Stout and William Faulkner's Nobel Prize Speech". Journal of Modern Literature. Indiana University Press. 10 (1): 151–152. JSTOR 3831202. from the original on June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  • Zeitlin, Michael (Spring 2016). "Faulkner and the Royal Air Force Canada, 1918". The Faulkner Journal. Johns Hopkins University. 30 (1): 15–38. doi:10.1353/fau.2016.0009. JSTOR 44578811. S2CID 165335050. from the original on June 24, 2021. Retrieved June 17, 2021.
  • Bleikasten, André (2017). William Faulkner: A Life through Novels. Bloomington: Indiana University. p. 218. ISBN 9780253023322. from the original on May 29, 2021. Retrieved February 13, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Meriwether, James B., ed. (1980). Lion in the Garden: Interviews with William Faulkner, 1926-1962. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0803230682.

External links edit

william, faulkner, faulkner, redirects, here, other, uses, faulkner, disambiguation, disambiguation, william, cuthbert, faulkner, ɔː, september, 1897, july, 1962, american, writer, known, novels, short, stories, fictional, yoknapatawpha, county, based, lafayet. Faulkner redirects here For other uses see Faulkner disambiguation and William Faulkner disambiguation William Cuthbert Faulkner ˈ f ɔː k n er 1 2 September 25 1897 July 6 1962 was an American writer known for his novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County based on Lafayette County Mississippi where Faulkner spent most of his life A Nobel laureate Faulkner is one of the most celebrated writers of American literature and often is considered the greatest writer of Southern literature William FaulknerFaulkner in 1954 photographed by Carl Van VechtenBornWilliam Cuthbert Falkner 1897 09 25 September 25 1897New Albany Mississippi U S DiedJuly 6 1962 1962 07 06 aged 64 Byhalia Mississippi U S EducationUniversity of Mississippi no degree Notable worksThe Sound and the Fury 1929 As I Lay Dying 1930 Light in August 1932 Absalom Absalom 1936 Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1949 National Book Award 1951 1955 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction 1955 1963 SpouseEstelle Oldham m 1929 wbr SignatureFaulkner was born in New Albany Mississippi and his family moved to Oxford Mississippi when he was a child With the outbreak of World War I he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force but did not serve in combat Returning to Oxford he attended the University of Mississippi for three semesters before dropping out He moved to New Orleans where he wrote his first novel Soldiers Pay 1925 He went back to Oxford and wrote Sartoris 1927 his first work set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County In 1929 he published The Sound and the Fury The following year he wrote As I Lay Dying Later that decade he wrote Light in August Absalom Absalom and The Wild Palms He also worked as a screenwriter contributing to Howard Hawks s To Have and Have Not and The Big Sleep adapted from The Big Sleep a novel by Raymond Chandler the former film adapted from a novel by Ernest Hemingway is the only film with contributions by two Nobel laureates 3 Faulkner s renown reached its peak upon the publication of Malcolm Cowley s The Portable Faulkner and his being awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature for his powerful and unique contribution to the modern American novel 4 He is the only Mississippi born Nobel laureate Two of his works A Fable 1954 and The Reivers 1962 won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction Faulkner died from a heart attack on July 6 1962 following a fall from his horse the month before Ralph Ellison called him the greatest artist the South has produced Contents 1 Life 1 1 Childhood and heritage 1 2 Trip to the North and early writings 1 3 New Orleans and early novels 1 4 The Sound and the Fury 1 5 1929 1931 1 6 Light in August and Hollywood years 1 7 Nobel Prize and later years 2 Writing 2 1 Style and technique 2 2 Themes and analysis 3 Legacy 3 1 Influence 3 2 Collections 4 Selected list of works 5 Filmography 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations and references 6 3 Works cited 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editChildhood and heritage edit nbsp Faulkner was influenced by stories of his great grandfather and namesake William Clark Falkner William Cuthbert Falkner was born on September 25 1897 in New Albany Mississippi 5 the first of four sons of Murry Cuthbert Falkner 1870 1932 and Maud Butler 1871 1960 6 His family was upper middle class but not quite of the old feudal cotton aristocracy 7 After Maud rejected Murry s plan to become a rancher in Texas 8 the family moved to Oxford Mississippi in 1902 9 where Faulkner s father established a livery stable and hardware store before becoming the University of Mississippi s business manager 10 9 Except for short periods elsewhere Faulkner lived in Oxford for the rest of his life 6 11 Faulkner spent his boyhood listening to stories told to him by his elders including those about the Civil War slavery the Ku Klux Klan and the Faulkner family 12 Young William was greatly influenced by the history of his family and the region in which he lived Mississippi marked his sense of humor his sense of the tragic position of black and white Americans his characterization of Southern characters and his timeless themes including fiercely intelligent people who are dwelling behind the facades of good ol boys and simpletons 13 He was particularly influenced by stories of his great grandfather William Clark Falkner who had become a near legendary figure in North Mississippi Born into poverty the elder Falkner was a strict disciplinarian and was a Confederate colonel Tried and acquitted twice on charges of murder he became a member of the Mississippi House and became a part owner of a railroad before being murdered by his co owner Faulkner incorporated many aspects of his great grandfather s biography into his later works 14 Faulkner initially excelled in school and skipped the second grade However beginning somewhere in the fourth and fifth grades he became a much quieter and more withdrawn child He occasionally played truant and became indifferent about schoolwork Instead he took an interest in studying the history of Mississippi The decline of his performance in school continued and Faulkner wound up repeating the eleventh and twelfth grades never graduating from high school 12 As a teenager in Oxford Faulkner dated Estelle Oldham 1897 1972 the popular daughter of Major Lemuel and Lida Oldham and he also believed he would marry her 15 However Estelle dated other boys during their romance and in 1918 Cornell Franklin five years Faulkner s senior proposed marriage to her before Faulkner did She accepted 16 note 1 Trip to the North and early writings edit nbsp Cadet Faulkner in Toronto 1918When he was 17 Faulkner met Phil Stone who became an important early influence on his writing Stone was four years his senior and came from one of Oxford s older families he was passionate about literature and had bachelor s degrees from Yale and the University of Mississippi Stone read and was impressed by some of Faulkner s early poetry becoming one of the first to recognize and encourage Faulkner s talent Stone mentored the young Faulkner introducing him to the works of writers like James Joyce who influenced Faulkner s own writing In his early 20s Faulkner gave poems and short stories he had written to Stone in hopes of their being published Stone sent these to publishers but they were uniformly rejected 17 In spring 1918 Faulkner traveled to live with Stone at Yale his first trip to the North 18 Through Stone Faulkner met writers like Sherwood Anderson Robert Frost and Ezra Pound 19 Faulkner attempted to join the US Army There are accounts of this that indicate he was rejected for being under weight and his short stature of 5 5 19 Other accounts purport to prove that the aforementioned accounts are false 20 Although he initially planned to join the British Army in hopes of being commissioned as an officer 21 Faulkner then joined the Canadian RAF with a forged letter of reference and left Yale to receive training in Toronto 22 Records indicate that Faulkner was never actually a member of the British Royal Flying Corps and never saw active service during the First World War 23 Despite claiming so in his letters Faulkner did not receive cockpit training or ever fly 24 Returning to Oxford in December 1918 Faulkner told acquaintances false war stories and even faked a war wound 25 In 1918 Faulkner s surname changed from Falkner to Faulkner According to one story a careless typesetter made an error When the misprint appeared on the title page of his first book Faulkner was asked whether he wanted the change He supposedly replied Either way suits me 26 In adolescence Faulkner began writing poetry almost exclusively He did not write his first novel until 1925 His literary influences are deep and wide He once stated that he modeled his early writing on the Romantic era in late 18th and early 19th century England 6 He attended the University of Mississippi enrolling in 1919 studying for three semesters before dropping out in November 1920 27 Faulkner joined the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and pursued his dream to become a writer 28 He skipped classes often and received a D grade in English However some of his poems were published in campus publications 17 29 In 1922 his poem Portrait was published in the New Orleans literary magazine Double Dealer The magazine published his New Orleans short story collection three years later 30 After dropping out he took a series of odd jobs at a New York City bookstore as a carpenter in Oxford and as the Ole Miss postmaster He resigned from the post office with the declaration I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp 31 New Orleans and early novels edit nbsp nbsp Publicity photographs of Faulkner summer 1924 nbsp During part of his time in New Orleans Faulkner lived in a house in the French Quarter pictured center yellow While most writers of Faulkner s generation traveled to and lived in Europe Faulkner remained writing in the United States 32 Faulkner spent the first half of 1925 in New Orleans Louisiana where many bohemian artists and writers lived specifically in the French Quarter where Faulkner lived beginning in March 33 During his time in New Orleans Faulkner s focus drifted from poetry to prose and his literary style made a marked transition from Victorian to modernist 34 The Times Picayune published several of his short works of prose 35 After being directly influenced by Sherwood Anderson Faulkner wrote his first novel Soldiers Pay 6 in New Orleans Soldiers Pay and his other early works were written in a style similar to contemporaries Ernest Hemingway and F Scott Fitzgerald at times nearly exactly appropriating phrases 36 Anderson assisted in the publication of Soldiers Pay and Mosquitoes by recommending them to his publisher 37 The miniature house at 624 Pirate s Alley just around the corner from St Louis Cathedral in New Orleans is now the site of Faulkner House Books where it also serves as the headquarters of the Pirate s Alley Faulkner Society 38 During the summer of 1927 Faulkner wrote his first novel set in his fictional Yoknapatawpha County titled Flags in the Dust This novel drew heavily from the traditions and history of the South in which Faulkner had been engrossed in his youth He was extremely proud of the novel upon its completion and he believed it a significant step up from his previous two novels however when submitted for publication to Boni amp Liveright it was rejected Faulkner was devastated by this rejection but he eventually allowed his literary agent Ben Wasson to edit the text and the novel was published in 1929 as Sartoris 29 37 note 2 The work was notable in that it was his first novel that dealt with the Civil War rather than the contemporary emphasis on World War I and its legacy 39 The Sound and the Fury edit nbsp The Sound and the Fury 1929 In autumn 1928 just after his 31st birthday Faulkner began working on The Sound and the Fury He started by writing three short stories about a group of children with the last name Compson but soon began to feel that the characters he had created might be better suited for a full length novel Perhaps as a result of disappointment in the initial rejection of Flags in the Dust Faulkner had now become indifferent to his publishers and wrote this novel in a much more experimental style In describing the writing process for this work Faulkner later said One day I seemed to shut the door between me and all publisher s addresses and book lists I said to myself Now I can write 40 After its completion Faulkner insisted that Wasson not do any editing or add any punctuation for clarity 29 1929 1931 edit In 1929 Faulkner married Estelle Oldham with Andrew Kuhn serving as best man at the wedding Estelle brought with her two children from her previous marriage to Cornell Franklin and Faulkner hoped to support his new family as a writer Faulkner and Estelle later had a daughter Jill in 1933 He began writing As I Lay Dying in 1929 while working night shifts at the University of Mississippi Power House The novel was published in 1930 41 Beginning in 1930 Faulkner sent some of his short stories to various national magazines Several of these were published and brought him enough income to buy a house in Oxford for his family which he named Rowan Oak 42 Fueled by a desire to make money Faulkner wrote Sanctuary 43 With limited royalties from his work he published short stories in magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post to supplement his income 44 Light in August and Hollywood years edit nbsp Light in August 1932 By 1932 Faulkner was in need of money He asked Wasson to sell the serialization rights for his newly completed novel Light in August to a magazine for 5 000 but none accepted the offer Then MGM Studios offered Faulkner work as a screenwriter in Hollywood Faulkner was not an avid movie goer and had reservations about working in the movie industry As Andre Bleikasten comments he was in dire need of money and had no idea how to get it So he went to Hollywood 45 It has been noted that authors like Faulkner were not always hired for their writing prowess but to enhance the prestige of the writers who hired them 45 He arrived in Culver City California in May 1932 The job began a sporadic relationship with moviemaking and with California which was difficult but he endured in order to earn a consistent salary that supported his family back home 46 Initially he declared a desire to work on Mickey Mouse cartoons not realizing that they were produced by Walt Disney Productions and not MGM 47 His first screenplay was for Today We Live an adaptation of his short story Turnabout which received a mixed response He then wrote a screen adaptation of Sartoris that was never produced 44 From 1932 to 1954 Faulkner worked on around 50 films 48 In early 1944 Faulkner wrote a screenplay adaptation of Ernest Hemingway s novel To Have and Have Not 49 The film was the first starring Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart Bogart and Bacall would star in Hawks s The Big Sleep another film Faulkner worked on 50 Faulkner was highly critical of what he found in Hollywood and he wrote letters that were scathing in tone painting a miserable portrait of a literary artist imprisoned in a cultural Babylon 51 Many scholars have brought attention to the dilemma he experienced and that the predicament had caused him serious unhappiness 52 46 53 In Hollywood he worked with director Howard Hawks with whom he quickly developed a friendship as they both enjoyed drinking and hunting Howard Hawks brother William Hawks became Faulkner s Hollywood agent Faulkner continued to find reliable work as a screenwriter from the 1930s to the 1950s 37 42 While staying in Hollywood Faulkner adopted a vagrant lifestyle living in brief stints in hotels like the Garden of Allah Hotel and frequenting the bar at the Roosevelt Hotel and the Musso amp Frank Grill where he was said to have regularly gone behind the bar to mix his own Mint Juleps 54 55 He had an extramarital affair with Hawks secretary and script girl Meta Carpenter 56 With the onset of World War II in 1942 Faulkner tried to join the United States Air Force but was rejected He instead worked on local civil defense 57 The war drained Faulkner of his enthusiasm He described the war as bad for writing 58 Amid this creative slowdown in 1943 Faulkner began work on a new novel that merged World War I s Unknown Soldier with the Passion of Christ Published over a decade later as A Fable it won the 1954 Pulitzer Prize 59 60 The award for A Fable was a controversial political choice The jury had selected Milton Lott s The Last Hunt for the prize but Pulitzer Prize Administrator Professor John Hohenberg convinced the Pulitzer board that Faulkner was long overdue for the award despite A Fable being a lesser work of his and the board overrode the jury s selection much to the disgust of its members 61 By the time of The Portable Faulkner s publication most of his novels had been out of print 32 Nobel Prize and later years edit nbsp Faulkner in 1954Faulkner was awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature for his powerful and artistically unique contribution to the modern American novel 62 It was awarded at the following year s banquet along with the 1950 Prize to Bertrand Russell 63 When Faulkner visited Stockholm in December 1950 to receive the Nobel Prize he met Else Jonsson 1912 1996 who was the widow of journalist Thorsten Jonsson 1910 1950 Jonsson a reporter for Dagens Nyheter from 1943 to 1946 had interviewed Faulkner in 1946 and introduced his works to Swedish readers Faulkner and Else had an affair that lasted until the end of 1953 At the banquet where they met in 1950 publisher Tor Bonnier introduced Else as the widow of the man responsible for Faulkner winning the Nobel prize 64 Faulkner s Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech on the immortality of the artists although brief contained a number of allusions and references to other literary works 65 However Faulkner detested the fame and glory that resulted from his recognition His aversion was so great that his 17 year old daughter learned of the Nobel Prize only when she was called to the principal s office during the school day 66 He began by saying I feel that this award was not made to me as a man but to my work a life s work in the agony and sweat of the human spirit not for glory and least of all for profit but to create out of the materials of the human spirit something which did not exist before So this award is only mine in trust It will not be difficult to find a dedication for the money part of it commensurate with the purpose and significance of its origin 67 He donated part of his Nobel money to establish a fund to support and encourage new fiction writers eventually resulting in the William Faulkner Foundation 1960 1970 In 1951 Faulkner received the Chevalier de la Legion d honneur medal from the government of France 68 Faulkner served as the first Writer in Residence at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville from February to June 1957 and again in 1958 69 70 In 1961 Faulkner began writing his nineteenth and final novel The Reivers The novel is a nostalgic reminiscence in which an elderly grandfather relates a humorous episode in which he and two boys stole a car to drive to a Memphis bordello In summer 1961 he finished the first draft 71 During this time he injured himself in a series of falls 72 On June 17 1962 Faulkner suffered a serious injury in a fall from his horse which led to thrombosis He suffered a fatal heart attack on July 6 1962 at the age of 64 at Wright s Sanatorium in Byhalia Mississippi 6 11 Faulkner is buried with his family in St Peter s Cemetery in Oxford 73 Writing edit nbsp One of Faulkner s typewritersFrom the early 1920s to the outbreak of World War II Faulkner published 13 novels and many short stories This body of work formed the basis of his reputation and earned him the Nobel Prize at age 52 Faulkner s prodigious output include celebrated novels such as The Sound and the Fury 1929 As I Lay Dying 1930 Light in August 1932 and Absalom Absalom 1936 He was also a prolific writer of short stories Faulkner s first short story collection These 13 1931 includes many of his most acclaimed and most frequently anthologized stories including A Rose for Emily Red Leaves That Evening Sun and Dry September He set many of his short stories and novels in Yoknapatawpha County which was based on and nearly geographically identical to Lafayette County of which his hometown of Oxford Mississippi is the county seat Yoknapatawpha was Faulkner s postage stamp and the bulk of work that it represents is widely considered by critics to amount to one of the most monumental fictional creations in the history of literature Three of his novels The Hamlet The Town and The Mansion known collectively as the Snopes trilogy document the town of Jefferson and its environs as an extended family headed by Flem Snopes insinuates itself into the lives and psyches of the general populace 74 Yoknapatawpha County has been described as a mental landscape 75 His short story A Rose for Emily was his first story published in a major magazine the Forum but received little attention from the public After revisions and reissues it gained popularity and is now considered one of his best Faulkner wrote two volumes of poetry which were published in small printings The Marble Faun 1924 and A Green Bough 1933 and a collection of mystery stories Knight s Gambit 1949 Style and technique edit The peacefullest words Peacefullest words Non fui Sum Fui Non sum Somewhere I heard bells once Mississippi or Massachusetts I was I am not Massachusetts or Mississippi Shreve has a bottle in his trunk Aren t you even going to open it Mr and Mrs Jason Richmond Compson announce the Three times Days Aren t you even going to open it marriage of their daughter Candace that liquor teaches you to confuse the means with the end I am Drink I was not Let us sell Benjy s pasture so that Quentin may go to Harvard and I may knock my bones together and together I will be dead in Was it one year Caddy said An example of Faulkner s prose in The Sound and the Fury 1929 Faulkner was known for his experimental style with meticulous attention to diction and cadence In contrast to the minimalist understatement of his contemporary Ernest Hemingway Faulkner made frequent use of stream of consciousness in his writing and wrote often highly emotional subtle cerebral complex and sometimes Gothic or grotesque stories of a wide variety of characters including former slaves or descendants of slaves poor white agrarian or working class Southerners and Southern aristocrats Faulkner s contemporary critical reception was mixed with The New York Times noting that many critics regarded his work as raw slabs of pseudorealism that had relatively little merit as serious writing 7 His style has been described as impenetrably convoluted 32 In an interview with The Paris Review in 1956 Faulkner remarked Let the writer take up surgery or bricklaying if he is interested in technique There is no mechanical way to get the writing done no shortcut The young writer would be a fool to follow a theory Teach yourself by your own mistakes people learn only by error The good artist believes that nobody is good enough to give him advice He has supreme vanity No matter how much he admires the old writer he wants to beat him In that same interview Jean Stein says Some people say they can t understand your writing even after they read it two or three times What approach would you suggest for them Faulkner replies Read it four times When asked about his influences Faulkner says the books I read are the ones I knew and loved when I was a young man and to which I return as you do to old friends the Old Testament Dickens Conrad Cervantes Don Quixote I read that every year as some do the Bible Flaubert Balzac he created an intact world of his own a bloodstream running through twenty books Dostoyevsky Tolstoy Shakespeare I read Melville occasionally and of the poets Marlowe Campion Jonson Herrick Donne Keats and Shelley 76 Like his contemporaries James Joyce and T S Eliot Faulkner uses stories and themes from classic literature in a modern context Joyce in Ulysses modeled the journey of his hero Leopold Bloom on the adventures of Odysseus Eliot in his essay Ulysses Order and Myth wrote that In using the myth in manipulating a continuous parallel between contemporaneity and antiquity Mr Joyce is pursuing a method which others must pursue after him They will not be imitators any more than the scientist who uses the discoveries of an Einstein in pursuing his own independent further investigations It is simply a way of controlling of ordering of giving a shape and a significance to the immense panorama of futility and anarchy which is contemporary history 77 Faulkner s allusions to earlier authors are evidenced by his titles the title of The Sound and the Fury comes from Macbeth s soliloquy it is a tale Told by an idiot full of sound and fury Signifying nothing The opening of the novel is told from the perspective of the intellectually disabled Benjy Compson The title of As I Lay Dying comes from Homer s Odyssey where it is spoken by Agamemnon in the past tense As I lay dying the woman with the dog s eyes would not close my eyes as I descended into Hades Faulkner s novel in contrast is narrated in the present tense 78 The title of Go Down Moses is from an African American spiritual and the book is dedicated To Mammy Caroline Barr Mississippi 1840 1940 Who was born in slavery and who gave to my family a fidelity without stint or calculation of recompense and to my childhood an immeasurable devotion and love 79 Themes and analysis edit Faulkner s work has been examined by many critics from a wide variety of critical perspectives including his position on slavery in the South and his view that desegregation was not an idea to be forced arguing desegregation should go slow so as not to upend the southern way of life citation needed The essayist and novelist James Baldwin was highly critical of his views around integration 80 Ralph Ellison said that No one in American fiction has done so much to explore the types of Negro personality as has Faulkner 81 The New Critics became interested in Faulkner s work with Cleanth Brooks writing The Yoknapatawpha Country and Michael Millgate writing The Achievement of William Faulkner Since then critics have looked at Faulkner s work using other approaches such as feminist and psychoanalytic methods 37 82 Faulkner s works have been placed within the literary traditions of modernism and the Southern Renaissance 83 French philosopher Albert Camus wrote that Faulkner successfully imported classical tragedy into the 20th century through his interminably unwinding spiral of words and sentences that conducts the speaker to the abyss of sufferings buried in the past 84 Legacy edit nbsp Faulkner s home Rowan Oak is maintained by the University of Mississippi nbsp A Parisian street named for FaulknerInfluence edit Faulkner is a towering figure in Southern literature Flannery O Connor wrote that the presence alone of Faulkner in our midst makes a great difference in what the writer can and cannot permit himself to do Nobody wants his mule and wagon stalled on the same track the Dixie Limited is roaring down 85 In 1943 while working at Warner Brothers Faulkner wrote a letter of encouragement to a young Mississippi writer Eudora Welty 86 According to critic and translator Valerie Miles Faulkner s influence on Latin American fiction is considerable with fictional worlds created by Gabriel Garcia Marquez Macondo and Juan Carlos Onetti Santa Maria being very much in the vein of Yoknapatawpha and that Carlos Fuentes s The Death of Artemio Cruz wouldn t exist if not for As I Lay Dying 87 Fuentes himself cited Faulkner as one of the writers most important to him 88 Faulkner had great influence on Mario Vargas Llosa particularly on his early novels The Time of the Hero The Green House and Conversation in the Cathedral Vargas Llosa has claimed that during his student years he learned more from Yoknapatawpha than from classes 89 Jorge Luis Borges translated Faulkner s The Wild Palms into Spanish 90 The works of William Faulkner are a clear influence on the French novelist Claude Simon 91 and the Portuguese novelist Antonio Lobo Antunes 92 Cormac McCarthy has been described as a disciple of Faulkner 93 In The Elements of Style E B White cites Faulkner If the experiences of Walter Mitty of Dick Diver of Rabbit Angstrom have seemed for the moment real to countless readers if in reading Faulkner we have almost the sense of inhabiting Yoknapatawpha County during the decline of the South it is because the details used are definite the terms concrete Later Faulkner s style is contrasted with that of Hemingway 94 After his death Estelle and their daughter Jill lived at Rowan Oak until Estelle s death in 1972 The property was sold to the University of Mississippi that same year The house and furnishings are maintained much as they were in Faulkner s day Faulkner s scribblings are preserved on the wall including the day by day outline covering a week he wrote on the walls of his small study to help him keep track of the plot twists in his novel A Fable 95 Some of Faulkner s Nobel Prize winnings went to establish the William Faulkner Foundation It gave an Award for Notable First Novel winners included John Knowles s A Separate Peace Thomas Pynchon s V Cormac McCarthy s The Orchard Keeper Robert Coover s The Origin of the Brunists and Frederick Exley s A Fan s Notes Starting in 1981 this became the PEN Faulkner Award for Fiction founded by among others Mary Lee Settle as an alternative to the National Book Award 96 Some of Faulkner s works have been adapted into films They have received a polarized response with many critics contending that Faulkner s works are unfilmable 97 Faulkner s final work The Reivers was adapted into a 1969 film starring Steve McQueen 98 Tommy Lee Jones s neo Western film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estada was partly based on Faulkner s As I Lay Dying 99 During the Nazi Occupation of France in World War II the German occupiers banned American literature A black market of American books emerged and reading works by Hemingway and Faulkner became an act of defiance 100 Faulkner remains especially popular in France where a 2009 poll found him the second most popular writer after only Marcel Proust Contemporary Jean Paul Sartre stated that for young people in France Faulkner is a god and Albert Camus made a stage adaptation of Faulkner s Requiem for a Nun 101 In Jean Luc Godard s Breathless Patricia Jean Seberg quotes The Wild Palms Between grief and nothing I will take grief 102 He also won the U S National Book Award twice for Collected Stories in 1951 103 and A Fable in 1955 104 The United States Postal Service issued a 22 cent postage stamp in his honor on August 3 1987 105 Faulkner had once served as Postmaster at the University of Mississippi and in his letter of resignation in 1923 wrote As long as I live under the capitalistic system I expect to have my life influenced by the demands of moneyed people But I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp This sir is my resignation 106 On October 10 2019 a Mississippi Writers Trail historical marker was installed at Rowan Oak in Oxford Mississippi honoring the contributions of William Faulkner to the American literary landscape 107 Collections edit The manuscripts of most of Faulkner s works correspondence personal papers and over 300 books from his working library reside at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia where he spent much of his time in his final years The library also houses some of the writer s personal effects and the papers of major Faulkner associates and scholars such as his biographer Joseph Blotner bibliographer Linton Massey and Random House editor Albert Erskine Southeast Missouri State University where the Center for Faulkner Studies is located also owns a generous collection of Faulkner materials including first editions manuscripts letters photographs artwork and many materials pertaining to Faulkner s time in Hollywood The university possesses many personal files and letters kept by Joseph Blotner along with books and letters that once belonged to Malcolm Cowley The university achieved the collection due to a generous donation by Louis Daniel Brodsky a collector of Faulkner materials in 1989 Further significant Faulkner materials reside at the University of Mississippi the Harry Ransom Center and the New York Public Library The Random House records at Columbia University also include letters by and to Faulkner 108 109 In 1966 the United States Military Academy dedicated a William Faulkner Room in its library 57 Selected list of works editMain article William Faulkner bibliography The Sound and the Fury 1929 As I Lay Dying 1930 Light in August 1932 Absalom Absalom 1936 The Wild Palms 1939 Go Down Moses 1942 Intruder in the Dust 1948 A Fable 1954 The Reivers 1962 Filmography editFlesh 1932 Today We Live 1933 The Story of Temple Drake 1933 Submarine Patrol 1938 Air Force 1943 To Have and Have Not 1944 The Big Sleep 1946 Land of the Pharaohs 1955 Notes and references editNotes edit He proposed marriage to her before Faulkner did Her parents insisted she marry Franklin for various reasons he was an Ole Miss law graduate had recently been commissioned as a major in the Hawaii Army National Guard and came from a respectable family with whom they were old friends 16 The original version was issued as Flags in the Dust in 1973 Citations and references edit Faulkner William Lexico com Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Faulkner Merriam Webster com Dictionary Phillips 1980 p 50 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949 NobelPrize org Archived from the original on June 2 2020 Retrieved January 4 2023 Minter 1980 p 1 a b c d e MWP William Faulkner 1897 1962 Archived November 1 2015 at the Wayback Machine OleMiss edu accessed September 26 2017 a b Faulkner s Home Family and Heritage Were Genesis of Yoknapatawpha County The New York Times July 7 1962 Archived from the original on December 18 2020 Retrieved June 17 2021 Minter 1980 p 7 a b Minter 1980 p 8 O Connor 1959 p 4 a b William Faulkner on Nobelprize org nbsp a b Minter David L William Faulkner His Life and Work Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press 1980 ISBN 0 8018 2347 1 William Faulkner s Demons The New Yorker November 18 2020 Retrieved March 3 2023 O Connor 1959 pp 4 5 Parini 2004 pp 22 29 a b Parini 2004 pp 36 37 a b Coughlan Robert The Private World of William Faulkner New York Harper amp Brothers 1953 ISBN 0 8154 0424 7 Zeitlin 2016 p 15 a b O Connor 1959 p 5 Zeitlin 2016 pp 17 18 Zeitlin 2016 pp 15 17 Zeitlin 2016 pp 17 20 Watson James G 2002 William Faulkner Self Presentation and Performance Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 79151 0 Zeitlin 2016 pp 24 25 Zeitlin 2016 pp 26 27 Nelson Randy F The Almanac of American Letters Los Altos California William Kaufmann Inc 1981 pp 63 64 ISBN 0 86576 008 X University of Mississippi William Faulkner Olemiss edu Archived from the original on September 22 2010 Retrieved September 27 2010 Messenger Christian K 1983 Sport and the Spirit of Play in American Fiction Hawthorne to Faulkner Columbia University Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 231 51661 7 Archived from the original on March 2 2022 Retrieved March 2 2022 a b c Porter Carolyn William Faulkner Archived December 2 2020 at the Wayback Machine New York Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 0 19 531049 7 Koch 2007 p 57 O Connor 1959 p 6 a b c Pikoulis 1982 p ix Koch 2007 pp 55 56 Koch 2007 pp 56 58 Koch 2007 pp 58 McKay 2009 p 119 121 a b c d Hannon Charles Faulkner William The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature Jay Parini 2004 Oxford University Press Inc The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature e reference edition Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190201098 013 484 Pirate s Alley Faulkner Society Featuring Words amp Music Wordsandmusic org Archived from the original on June 28 2012 Retrieved August 13 2012 McKay 2009 p 119 Porter Carolyn William Faulkner Archived December 2 2020 at the Wayback Machine New York Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 0 19 531049 7 pg 37 Parini 2004 p 142 a b Williamson Joel William Faulkner and Southern History Archived March 5 2017 at the Wayback Machine New York Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 510129 4 The Most Horrific Tale I Could Imagine Washington Post March 8 1981 Retrieved March 3 2023 a b Bartunek 2017 p 98 a b Bleikasten 2017 p 218 a b Solomon Stefan 2017 William Faulkner in Hollywood Screenwriting for the Studios Athens University of Georgia p 1 ISBN 9780820351148 Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved May 29 2020 Literary Daybook May 7 Salon May 7 2002 Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 Bartunek 2017 p 100 Minter 1980 p 201 Crowther Bosley June 4 2022 To Have and Have Not With Humphrey Bogart at the Hollywood Arrival of Other New Films at Theatres Here The New York Times Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 Solomon Stefan 2017 William Faulkner in Hollywood Screenwriting for the Studios Athens University of Georgia p 1 ISBN 9780820351148 Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved May 29 2020 Bleikasten 2017 pp 215 220 Leitch Thomas 2016 Lights camera author authorship as Hollywood performance Journal of Screenwriting 7 1 113 127 doi 10 1386 josc 7 1 113 1 Spano Susan September 16 2011 William Faulkner s Hollywood Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 The Fascinating History of the Mint Julep Town amp Country April 10 2017 Archived from the original on October 14 2022 Retrieved October 14 2022 Parini 2004 pp 198 99 a b Capps 1966 p 3 Minter 1980 pp 198 200 Minter 1980 p 198 Fiction The Pulitzer Prizes Columbia University Archived from the original on April 2 2019 Retrieved June 4 2022 Hohenberg John John Hohenberg The Pursuit of Excellence University Press of Florida Gainesville 1995 pp 162 163 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949 Nobelprize org Archived from the original on June 2 2020 Retrieved July 25 2009 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949 Documentary Nobelprize org Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved July 25 2009 En karlekshistoria i Nobelprisklass Dagens Nyheter in Swedish Sweden January 9 2010 archived from the original on April 10 2010 retrieved April 22 2010 Rife 1983 pp 151 152 Gordon Debra Faulkner William In Bloom Harold ed William Faulkner Bloom s BioCritiques Philadelphia Chelsea House Publishing 2002 ISBN 0 7910 6378 X The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949 NobelPrize org Retrieved March 18 2023 William Faulkner archival material to be sold at auction TODAY com March 28 2013 Ringle Ken September 25 1997 Faulkner Between the Lines The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 8 2022 Retrieved June 18 2021 Blotner J and Frederick L Gwynn eds 1959 Faulkner in the University Conferences at the University of Virginia 1957 1958 OCLC 557743504 Minter 1980 pp 246 247 Minter 1980 pp 247 248 Jennifer Ciotta Touring William Faulkner s Oxford Mississippi Literarytraveler com Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved September 27 2010 Charlotte Renner Talking and Writing in Faulkner s Snopes Trilogy ACADEMIC JOURNAL ARTICLE The Southern Literary Journal Vol 15 No 1 Fall 1982 Pikoulis 1982 p 2 Stein Jean 1956 The Art of Fiction No 12 Paris Review Spring 1956 12 T S Eliot Ulysses Order and Myth in The Dial Nov 1923 www ricorso net Retrieved March 27 2023 Brooks Cleanth William Faulkner The Yoknapatawpha Country Simon Julia 2017 Repudiation and Redemption in Go Down Moses Accounting Settling Gaming the System and Justice The Southern Quarterly 55 1 30 54 ISSN 2377 2050 Cep Casey November 23 2020 William Faulkner s Demons The New Yorker Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved February 12 2021 Mikics David August 3 2021 Ellison s Invisible Man and Faulkner s Light in August An Argument in Black and White Literary Imagination 23 2 194 201 doi 10 1093 litimag imab027 Wagner Martin Linda William Faulkner Six Decades of Criticism East Lansing MI Michigan State University Press 2002 ISBN 0 87013 612 7 Abadie Ann J and Doreen Fowler Faulkner and the Southern Renaissance Archived March 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi 1982 ISBN 1 60473 201 6 Camus 1970 pp 313 314 Levinger Larry 2000 The Prophet Faulkner The Atlantic St C Crane Joan 1989 William Faulkner to Eudora Welty A Letter The Mississippi Quarterly 42 3 223 227 ISSN 0026 637X JSTOR 26475181 Kan Elianna April 9 2015 The Forest of Letters An Interview with Valerie Miles The Paris Review Archived from the original on April 14 2015 Retrieved April 16 2015 The Latin Master Archived June 24 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian 5 May 2001 The masters who influenced the Latin American Boom Vargas Llosa and Garcia Marquez took cues from Faulkner El Pais November 21 2012 Archived from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved June 22 2021 Vegh Beatriz 1995 The Wild Palms and Las palmeras salvajes The Southern Counterpoint Faulkner Borges The Faulkner Journal 11 1 2 165 179 JSTOR 24907724 via JSTOR Duncan Alistair B Claude Simon and William Faulkner Forum for Modern Language Studies Volume IX Issue 3 July 1973 Pages 235 252 Bucaioni Marco A Huge Debt to 20th Century Modernism Antonio Lobo Antunes s Prose Style and his Models Repositorio da Universidade de Lisboa 2019 p 477 497 Prescott Orville May 12 1965 Still Another Disciple of William Faulkner The New York Times Archived from the original on May 23 2022 Retrieved June 12 2022 White E B 1975 The Elements of Style 3rd ed p 22 Block Melissa February 13 2017 William Faulkner s Home Illustrates His Impact On The South NPR org Archived from the original on August 11 2018 Retrieved August 11 2018 Our History The PEN Faulkner Foundation www penfaulkner org Retrieved March 3 2023 Bartunek 2017 p 97 Ebert Roger December 29 1969 The Reivers RogerEbert com Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved July 2 2021 Mills Warren June 15 2006 As Melquiades Lay Dying Indiana Daily Student Blotner 1974 p 1222 Dugdale John March 19 2009 France s strange love affair with William Faulkner The Guardian Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 Breathless 1960 IMDb retrieved March 16 2023 National Book Awards 1951 Archived October 28 2018 at the Wayback Machine National Book Foundation Retrieved 2012 03 31 With essays by Neil Baldwin and Harold Augenbraum from the Awards 50 and 60 year anniversary publications National Book Awards 1955 Archived April 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine National Book Foundation Retrieved 2012 03 31 With acceptance speech by Faulkner and essays by Neil Baldwin and Harold Augenbraum from the Awards 50 and 60 year anniversary publications Scott catalogue 2350 William Faulkner Quits His Post Office Job in Splendid Fashion with a 1924 Resignation Letter Openculture September 30 2012 Archived from the original on March 25 2015 Retrieved February 5 2014 Thompson Jake October 11 2019 William Faulkner marker added to Mississippi Writers Trail The Oxford Eagle Archived from the original on June 17 2020 Retrieved June 16 2020 Random House records 1925 1999 Archived from the original on December 29 2017 Retrieved May 25 2018 Jaillant 2014 Oppression and Its Effects on the Individual and Society in Faulkner s A Rose for Emily El Ruha 5th International Conference on Social Sciences Proceedings Book Eds Fethi Demir amp Mehmet Recep Tas ISBN 978 605 80857 7 0 Oct 15 2019 Tunisia Pg 31 38 www elruha org Works cited edit Bartunek C J Summer 2017 The Wasteland Revisited William Faulkner s First Year in Hollywood South Atlantic Review 82 2 97 116 JSTOR 90013647 Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 19 2021 Camus Albert 1970 Thody Philip ed Lyrical and Critical Essays Translated by Kennedy Ellen Conroy Vintange ISBN 0394708520 Capps Jack L Spring 1966 West Point s William Faulkner Room The Georgia Review 20 1 3 8 JSTOR 41396230 Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 19 2021 William Faulkner Novels 1930 1935 Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk ed Library of America 1985 ISBN 978 0 940450 26 4 William Faulkner Novels 1936 1940 Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk eds Library of America 1990 ISBN 978 0 940450 55 4 William Faulkner Novels 1942 1954 Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk eds Library of America 1994 ISBN 978 0 940450 85 1 William Faulkner Novels 1957 1962 Noel Polk ed with notes by Joseph Blotner Library of America 1999 ISBN 978 1 883011 69 7 William Faulkner Novels 1926 1929 Joseph Blotner and Noel Polk eds Library of America 2006 ISBN 978 1 931082 89 1 The Portable Faulkner ed Malcolm Cowley Viking Press 1946 ISBN 978 0 14 243728 5 Blotner Joseph 1974 Faulkner A Biography 2 vols Random House Blotner Joseph Faulkner A Biography New York Random House 1984 Fowler Doreen Abadie Ann Faulkner and Popular Culture Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Univ Press of Mississippi 1990 ISBN 0 87805 434 0 ISBN 978 0 87805 434 3 Jaillant Lise I m Afraid I ve Got Involved With a Nut New Faulkner Letters Southern Literary Journal 47 1 2014 98 114 Archived May 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine Kerr Elizabeth Margaret and Kerr Michael M William Faulkner s Yoknapatawpha A Kind of Keystone in the Universe Fordham Univ Press 1985 ISBN 0 8232 1135 5 ISBN 978 0 8232 1135 7 Koch Benjamin Winter 2007 The French Quarter Apprentice William Faulkner s Modernist Evolution Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 48 1 55 68 JSTOR 4234243 Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 18 2021 Lienard Yeterian Marie Faulkner et le cinema Paris Michel Houdiard Editeur 2010 ISBN 978 2 35692 037 9 Minter David L 1980 William Faulkner his life and work Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801823473 McKay David Fall 2009 Faulkner s First War Conflict Mimesis and the Resonance of Defeat South Central Review The Johns Hopkins University Press 26 3 119 130 doi 10 1353 scr 0 0062 JSTOR 40645990 S2CID 144583260 Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 18 2021 Phillips Gene D 1980 Hemingway and Film New York NY Frederick Ungar Publishing Co ISBN 978 0804426954 Sensibar Judith L The Origins of Faulkner s Art Austin University of Texas Press 1984 ISBN 0 292 79020 1 Sensibar Judith L Faulkner and Love The Women Who Shaped His Art A Biography New Haven Yale University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 300 16568 5 Sensibar Judith L Vision in Spring Austin University of Texas Press 1984 ISBN 0 292 78712 X O Connor William Van 1959 William Faulkner Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Parini Jay 2004 One Matchless Time A Life of William Faulkner New York HarperCollins pp 22 29 ISBN 0 06 621072 0 Pikoulis John 1982 The Art of William Faulkner Totowa New Jersey Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 9780333300947 Rosella Mamoli Zorzi 2000 William Faulkner in Venice proceedings of the International Conference Language Stylistics Translations Venice Marsilio p 347 ISBN 9788831776264 OCLC 634327206 Archived from the original on September 8 2019 Retrieved August 20 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Rife David March 1983 Rex Stout and William Faulkner s Nobel Prize Speech Journal of Modern Literature Indiana University Press 10 1 151 152 JSTOR 3831202 Archived from the original on June 25 2021 Retrieved June 18 2021 Zeitlin Michael Spring 2016 Faulkner and the Royal Air Force Canada 1918 The Faulkner Journal Johns Hopkins University 30 1 15 38 doi 10 1353 fau 2016 0009 JSTOR 44578811 S2CID 165335050 Archived from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved June 17 2021 Bleikasten Andre 2017 William Faulkner A Life through Novels Bloomington Indiana University p 218 ISBN 9780253023322 Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved February 13 2020 Further reading editMeriwether James B ed 1980 Lion in the Garden Interviews with William Faulkner 1926 1962 Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803230682 External links editWilliam Faulkner at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource William Faulkner Papers at the University of Virginia William Faulkner Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Works by William Faulkner in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by William Faulkner at Faded Page Canada Works by or about William Faulkner at Internet Archive Works by William Faulkner at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp William Faulkner at IMDb Digital Yoknapatawpha Faulkner at Virginia An Audio Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Faulkner amp oldid 1197479427, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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