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Faulkner on the Color Line - The Later Novels (Paperback)
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Faulkner on the Color Line - The Later Novels (Paperback)
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This study argues that Faulkner's writings about racial matters
interrogated rather than validated his racial beliefs and that, in
the process of questioning his own ideology, his fictional forms
extended his reach as an artist. After winning the Nobel Prize in
1950, Faulkner wrote what critics term ""his later novels."" These
have been almost uniformly dismissed, with the prevailing view
being that as he became a more public figure, his fiction became a
platform rather than a canvas. Within this context Faulkner on the
Color Line redeems the novels in the final phase of his career by
interpreting them as Faulkner's way of addressing the problem of
race in America. They are seen as a series of formal experiments
Faulkner deliberately attempted as he examined the various cultural
functions of narrative, most particularly those narratives that
enforce American racial ideology. The first chapters look at the
ways in which the ability to assert oneself verbally informs
matters of individual and cultural identity in both the widely
studied works of Faulkner's major phase and those in his later
career. Later chapters focus on the last works, providing detailed
readings of Intruder in the Dust, Requiem for a Nun, the Snopes
trilogy, A Fable, and The Reivers. The book examines Faulkner as he
confronted the vexing questions of race in these novels and
assesses the identity of Faulkner as the Nobel Prize winner who
claimed on many occasions that he was ""tired,"" maybe ""written
out."" In his decision not to speak in the identity of the black
people represented in his fiction, in his decision to write instead
about the complexities of all racial constructions, he produced a
host of characters suffering within the rigid protocols on race
that had been enforced in America for centuries. As a private,
white individual, he could never be other than what he was. Rather
than attempt to reconcile Faulkner the public man with the private
one, however, this study concludes that through his fiction
Faulkner the artist questioned himself and came to understand
others across the color line.
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