This article reads William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! (1936) as a constant negotiation between Thomas Stupen's "design" and the class of the planters, with which he tries to compete. Sutpen's childhood in the Appalachian Mountains, where class and racial differences are largely absent, renders his descent with his family into the plains in Tidewater as a kind of a Fall associated with knowledge. Sutpen observes the importance of land in the plains and the racial differences on the basis of colour and the differences between white people and white people. Even though Sutpen's humiliation comes from a black butler who does not allow him to enter the mansion of the planter Bettibone from the front door, it is with the planter that Sutpen pla...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
In a 1975 article on the place of yeomen farmers in a slave society, Eugene D. Genovese identified a...
William Faulkner is a famous American novelist, and he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1949. H...
The Tamer\u27s Lash : Thomas Sutpen as Monstrous Ur-Planter in Faulkner\u27s Absalom, Absalom! / Jos...
[[abstract]]This paper proposes to explore the involuted relationship between the narrative perspect...
The main aim of this thesis is to analyze the decline of the so-called Southern aristocracy in two s...
“Race, Women, and the South: Faulkner’s Connection to and Separation from the Fugitive-Agrarians” ex...
“Race, Women, and the South: Faulkner’s Connection to and Separation from the Fugitive-Agrarians” ex...
In the novel Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner, the reader is met with a handful of narrators at...
A Novel by William Faulkner First published 1936 Random House (Hardcover, $22.00, ISBN: 0375508724, ...
The current examination is an endeavor to research followed of Homi K Bhabha's postcolonial key thou...
A Novel by William Faulkner First published 1936 Random House (Hardcover, $22.00, ISBN: 0375508724, ...
The aim of this abstract is to show the image of South in Absalom, Absalom! which i...
A number of critics have ever addressed Faulkner’s South from varied perspectives. It seems, howeve...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
In a 1975 article on the place of yeomen farmers in a slave society, Eugene D. Genovese identified a...
William Faulkner is a famous American novelist, and he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1949. H...
The Tamer\u27s Lash : Thomas Sutpen as Monstrous Ur-Planter in Faulkner\u27s Absalom, Absalom! / Jos...
[[abstract]]This paper proposes to explore the involuted relationship between the narrative perspect...
The main aim of this thesis is to analyze the decline of the so-called Southern aristocracy in two s...
“Race, Women, and the South: Faulkner’s Connection to and Separation from the Fugitive-Agrarians” ex...
“Race, Women, and the South: Faulkner’s Connection to and Separation from the Fugitive-Agrarians” ex...
In the novel Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner, the reader is met with a handful of narrators at...
A Novel by William Faulkner First published 1936 Random House (Hardcover, $22.00, ISBN: 0375508724, ...
The current examination is an endeavor to research followed of Homi K Bhabha's postcolonial key thou...
A Novel by William Faulkner First published 1936 Random House (Hardcover, $22.00, ISBN: 0375508724, ...
The aim of this abstract is to show the image of South in Absalom, Absalom! which i...
A number of critics have ever addressed Faulkner’s South from varied perspectives. It seems, howeve...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
The idea of a “white soul” and the protection of its purity was prolific during William Faulkner’s a...
In a 1975 article on the place of yeomen farmers in a slave society, Eugene D. Genovese identified a...