Sunday, August 4, 2019
The Fall of the Compson Family in Faulknerââ¬â¢s The Sound and the Fury Es
The Fall of the Compson Family in Faulknerââ¬â¢s The Sound and the Fury That Faulknerââ¬â¢s title for his complicated The Sound and the Fury comes from Macbeth is common knowledge, and reading the novel only confirms Faulknerââ¬â¢s choice as sound. Certainly there is an almost constant desire to behead characters so as to quiet their almost constant ââ¬Å"bellering.â⬠The common theme critics identify in the novel is the terrible fall of the Southern aristocracy, yet I cannot help but think that there was not, by that time, far to fall, at least not in the case of the Compson family. Faulknerââ¬â¢s modernist fiction supposedly speaks to the demise of the Old South, a decline encapsulated in the Compson familyââ¬â¢s trajectory of self-pity and tragedy. The implication is that this is a family well-entrenched in the aura of the Old South, which suffers a loss of prestige and valor in the dark days following the literal and symbolic muddying of Caddyââ¬â¢s drawers. Indeed, with Quentinââ¬â¢s suicide, the last of the Compson family, i n terms of its past, is come to an end ââ¬â but not because his death is part of a lo...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.