There is a particularly strong analogy of both form and content between Beowulf and those novels by William Faulkner most deeply engaged with the Old Testament: Absalom, Absalom! and Go Down, Moses. Michael Lapidge compares Beowulf's technique of relating incomplete versions of an event through multiple perspectives to Faulkner's method of narration in The Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying. Beowulf was written by a Christian in Anglo-Saxon England, but takes place in a pagan society in fifth- to sixth-century Scandinavia. Both Faulkner and the Beowulf poet place fictional, semi-mythical central characters among real places, people, and events with which they expect their readers to be familiar. Within a contemporary American cultural co...
Sartoris is the third novel of William Faulkner. With this book he discovers his own world and begin...
Collected Stories of William Faulkner, published in 1950 and awarded the National Book Award for Fic...
The Old English epic Beowulf is under discussion in this essay and the idea of the truth embedded in...
In this, the author compares and contrasts the use of narrative in two of William Faulkner’s most fa...
In the course of its development as a genre, the novel shifted in the mid-twentieth century from a m...
Includes bibliographical references.This study investigates the antithetical parallel structural pat...
This thesis attempt to prove how William Faulkner problematizes the idea of historical truth through...
Language is never just a medium for William Faulkner. From the early years on, writing entails confr...
Faulkner's treatment of the "Negro" in his fiction has led to heated debates among scholars and crit...
Vita.The theme of incest pervades much of the work of William Faulkner. It appears in the early writ...
Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom!, having escaped the pejorative category of “...
The author explores the relationship between actual events and circumstances in Faulkner’s own life ...
Very little of the huge corpus of Beowulf criticism has been directed at discovering the function an...
William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury is among the best novels of the 20 th century. Although Fa...
William Faulkner\u27s unorthodox use of Christian imagery in his major novels proved a stumbling-blo...
Sartoris is the third novel of William Faulkner. With this book he discovers his own world and begin...
Collected Stories of William Faulkner, published in 1950 and awarded the National Book Award for Fic...
The Old English epic Beowulf is under discussion in this essay and the idea of the truth embedded in...
In this, the author compares and contrasts the use of narrative in two of William Faulkner’s most fa...
In the course of its development as a genre, the novel shifted in the mid-twentieth century from a m...
Includes bibliographical references.This study investigates the antithetical parallel structural pat...
This thesis attempt to prove how William Faulkner problematizes the idea of historical truth through...
Language is never just a medium for William Faulkner. From the early years on, writing entails confr...
Faulkner's treatment of the "Negro" in his fiction has led to heated debates among scholars and crit...
Vita.The theme of incest pervades much of the work of William Faulkner. It appears in the early writ...
Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom!, having escaped the pejorative category of “...
The author explores the relationship between actual events and circumstances in Faulkner’s own life ...
Very little of the huge corpus of Beowulf criticism has been directed at discovering the function an...
William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury is among the best novels of the 20 th century. Although Fa...
William Faulkner\u27s unorthodox use of Christian imagery in his major novels proved a stumbling-blo...
Sartoris is the third novel of William Faulkner. With this book he discovers his own world and begin...
Collected Stories of William Faulkner, published in 1950 and awarded the National Book Award for Fic...
The Old English epic Beowulf is under discussion in this essay and the idea of the truth embedded in...