With essays by Richard Godden, Catherine Gunther Kodat, Kathryn
B. McKee, Peter Nicolaison, Charles A. Peek, Noel Polk, Hortense J.
Spillers, Joseph R. Urgo, Linda Wagner-Martin, and Charles Reagan
Wilson
William Faulkner is Mississippi's most famous author and
arguably one of the country's greatest writers. But what was his
relationship with America? How did he view the nation, its
traditions, its issues?
In ten essays from the 1998 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha
Conference, held at the University of Mississippi, "Faulkner in
America" looks closely at the exchange between William Faulkner the
writer and his national affiliation. Collectively, the essays ask
which American ideas, identities, and conflicts we should associate
with Mississippi's Nobel Laureate.
The collection explores questions regarding Faulkner's place in
American literature, his standing and esteem in literary studies,
and his relation to the United States. To address such issues, the
writers seek a definition of the phrase "Faulkner in America."
One difficulty scholars wrestle with is how to deal with
Mississippi's place in the union. Surely, Faulkner mused: Is
Mississippi in America? When he thought about America, he thought
about being left alone, about maintaining his distance.
Essays in this volume look at Faulkner's views on the "greening
of American history," on American figures such as Thomas Jefferson,
on women in American letters, and on the American dream.
Authors find that the conceptually invigorating signification of
the phrase "Faulkner in America" is, finally, provisional. Foremost
in Faulkner's mind, in interviews as well as in the aesthetics of
the apocryphal Yoknapatawpha County, is that whoever and whatever
is in America arrived by battles won and lost, by emigration and
enslavement, by choice and by compulsion. "Faulkner in America"
occasions a rigorous examination of Faulkner's American
century.
Joseph R. Urgo is chair of the English department at the
University of Mississippi. His books include "Faulkner's
Apocrypha," "Novel Frames: Literature as Guide to Race, Sex, and
History in American Culture," and "In the Age of Distraction," all
published by University Press of Mississippi.
Ann J. Abadie is associate director of the Center for the Study
of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi. She has
co-edited "Faulkner in Cultural Context," "Faulkner and the Natural
World" and "Faulkner at 100: Retrospect and Prospect," among other
Faulkner volumes, all published by University Press of
Mississippi.
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