Tuesday, April 21, 2015

It's the final countdown

Well, I have officially completed The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner decided that the sequence of his narrations should go as such: 
ridiculously hard to comprehend, I don't think I can do this
--holy cow, are you serious right now?
--I can understand you but I wish you'd go away
--wow, this is basic speech! 
I think that Faulkner did this intentionally to 1) grab our attention as a reader 2) force us to really search for the little details and 3) relay a theme of time 
It has an interesting affect on the narration because the varying complication of each, reveals something about the character. The most interesting thing to me was that the novel started with Benjy, three days before Christ's death and ended with Dilsy's 3rd person narration, right around the time of Easter. I think that this novel is truly about the absurd "values" of the Old South and needed shift to the values of New South, which is manifested as Caddy. 

I think the Macbeth quote "[life] is a tale told by an idiot, signifying nothing." is a perfect symbol of the abstract meaning of the novel as a whole. It encompasses why Faulkner used various characters to tell the story of the Compson family. 

Monday, April 20, 2015

Jason, the devil

Jason's chapter was ultimately a big reveal of what a huge jerk he is. A continuous theme throughout the entire chapter was his blatant bitterness toward everyone and everything, the only character he shows slight sympathy to is his mom, but this is merely to take advantage of her. In fact, his horrible attitude is identified in the very first line of this chapter, "once a bitch, always a bitch." This line set the tone for the rest of the chapter. Whether it was mocking his brother'a suicide, or his generalization of all girls as sluts, Jason is an angry, angry man. He has a big mouth and yet never follows through in action. For example he says to give a woman a "bust in the jaw" to set her straight, and yet he never lays a finger on miss Quentin. My questions for this chapter are how does Jason follow the theme of time throughout the novel and what sparked his ridiculous bitterness. 

Monday, April 13, 2015

Quentin

    Quentin's chapter was quite the complicated read. I had already struggled at trying to grasp the lapses in time throughout Benjy's chapter, but it seems as though Quentin's was just a jumbled stream of consciousness. Although Benjy was able to maintain a state of "unbiased" throughout his narration, Quentin's overuse of "I" has made it difficult to discern was was real and what was a result of his own dispositions. It was almost frustrating because his use of I wasn't always consistent, sometime his recollections seemed as if he didn't even acknowledge his own presence even though he was talking directly about himself. 
Quentin has this absurd, compulsive obsession with time. From his grandfather'a watch to the sound of the bells. This indicates a certain mental ailment, potentially even more unstable then Benjy, and made his narration even more confusing. Not to mention the fact that this whole chapter takes place before Benjy's did, so I still have no grasp at the sequence of this overall novel. However, through Quentin's streamp of consciousness that seems to trump all boundaries of time, I am predicting that it  is a significant factor and theme of this book. 
Quentin's mental instability is also auppirted by his rigid obsession with honor, which is a cultural aspect, one rooted into the Deep South, but he takes it to another level. Both Benjy and Quentin share an intense love for Caddy, and when Caddy becomes pregnant by a foreign man, Quentin tries to convince his father that he and caddy have commited incest. 

It's the culmination of his obsession with time, honor, and blurry overuse of "I", that made Quentin's chapter not only confusing, but ultimately, very telling of his character. 

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Benjy Chapter

  After acquiring a significant amount of background knowledge on Faulkner and his writing ability, my expectations were set high for the first chapter. To say my expectations were exceeded would be a drastic understatement. Benjy is the narrator of this first chapter, and this was done by no mistake of Faulkner's. Benjy, from the very beginning is used as a key tool of symbolism set as a precedent for the entire novel. His mental retardation and reliance upon the lesser senses such as smell, offers us as readers this sense of trust and reliability toward Benjy. He is innocent and unbiased, and through this, Faulkner successfully reveals the genuine nature of the characters and setting of this book, and I think this wouldn't have been accomplished if he had started with any other character.  Also, his coming age of 33, 3 days before Easter is an intended symbol for a "Christ-like" significance, and that combined with his great deal of suffering at the hands of the people around him. I think we will see more parallels and significance to this symbolism later on in the novel.

   Benjy'a status as a member of the household is highly disheartening. It is like the coined scruffy little pup that constantly gets kicked by all except the neighbor girl from across the street, who loves this dog despite its shortcomings. The slaves treat him poorly, his siblings treat him poorly, (all but Caddy that is) and his mom, of all people, is the worst. She deliberately changed Benjy's name from Maury, because Mory being a family name, it would be just another "grotesque stain" on her family's image. 

    Benjy's need for consistency and high nostalgia contributes to Faulkner's given concept of family. As discovered through my research, Faulkner is known for writing what he knows, the people, who/how they are and where they are. That said, it is through these tendencies of Benjy that he establishes the concept of family as a unit, close-knit and interdependent. This means that every and every change is significant, and carries consequences to the dynamic, either positive or negative. It also shows us a lot about the south at that time, how it was as a community, that family name carried value, and significance. 

However so many pages in, I am already in love with Benjy, Faulkner has written him to be capable of sympathy and adoration, but through small intricacies, has indicated a greater significance for him as a character, and I think that this will only continue to grow as the novel progresses. 

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

All about Faulkner

   What a character! Researching about Faulkner, has not only gotten me excessively excited to read the Sound and The Fury, but also about reading his writing! I find his foundational setting, the imaginary Yoknapatawphato, to be absolutely intriguing! Faulkner writes about what he knows, the south, and so I truly look forward to reading this example of his work and try to analyze the characters and relate them as to how they were in relation to Faulkner. Also, the man one a stinking Nobel Prize, soooo that's another bonus! In my opinion, putting together the two pieces of how he wrote about what he knew and felt and that he in turn won an award so prestigious for it, creates this image of one kick-butt kind of guy! 

   Now, let's talk about his speech! How eloquent he is;well spoken and witty in the most humble of ways!  In his Nobel Prize acceptance he said: 
    "He must learn them again. He must teach himself that the basest of all things is to be afraid; and, teaching himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking which any story is ephemeral and doomed - love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice." 
   This text not only displays his incredible, genuine humility, but contains a profound wisdom, that lacks any superficial philosophical attempts. It's absolutely beautiful, and daunting, really. Unlike the stereo-type given to many artists, I don't read this and think, "Oh! What a tortured soul, that's why his writing is so good! He knows real pain...." No, none of that garbage, I merely relate to this as him being a being who is consciously aware. Aware of the people and world that surrounds him. People like Faulkner are vital to society. The courage to step up and write truth. We as a people need to read these views, and then hopefully, in turn, find the ability to see them for our selves!