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William Faulkner remains a historian's writer. A distinguished
roster of historians have referenced Faulkner in their published
work. They are drawn to him as a fellow historian, a shaper of
narrative reflections on the meaning of the past; as a
historiographer, a theorist, and dramatist of the fraught
enterprise of doing history; and as a historical figure himself,
especially following his mid-century emergence as a public
intellectual after winning the Nobel Prize for Literature. This
volume brings together historians and literary scholars to explore
the many facets of Faulkner's relationship to history: the
historical contexts of his novels and stories; his explorations of
the historiographic imagination; his engagement with historical
figures from both the regional and national past; his influence on
professional historians; his pursuit of alternate modes of temporal
awareness; and the histories of print culture that shaped the
production, reception, and criticism of Faulkner's work.
Contributors draw on the history of development in the Mississippi
Valley, the construction of Confederate memory, the history and
curriculum of Harvard University, twentieth-century debates over
police brutality and temperance reform, the history of modern
childhood, and the literary histories of anti-slavery writing and
pulp fiction to illuminate Faulkner's work. Others in the
collection explore the meaning of Faulkner's fiction for such
professional historians as C. Vann Woodward and Albert Bushnell
Hart. In these ways and more, Faulkner and History offers fresh
insights into one of the most persistent and long-recognized
elements of the Mississippian's artistic vision.
These essays examine issues across the wide arc of Faulkner's
extraordinary career, from his aesthetic apprenticeship in the
visual arts, to late-career engagements with the Cold War, the
civil rights movement, and beyond, to the place of death in his
artistic vision and the long, varied afterlives he and his writings
have enjoyed in literature and popular culture. Contributors
deliver stimulating reassessments of Faulkner's first novel,
Soldiers' Pay; his final novel, The Reivers; and much of the
important work between. Scholars explore how a broad range of elite
and lowbrow cultural forms--plantation diaries, phonograph records,
pulp magazines--shaped Faulkner's capacious imagination and how his
works were translated into such media as film and modern dance.
Essays place Faulkner's writings in dialogue with those of such
fellow twentieth-century authors as W. E. B. Du Bois, Ernest
Hemingway, Richard Hall, and Jayne Anne Phillips; locate his work
in relation to African American intellectual currents and Global
South artistic traditions; and weigh the rewards as well as the
risks of dislodging Faulkner from the canonical position he
currently occupies. While Faulkner studies has cultivated an image
of the novelist as a neglected genius who toiled in obscurity, a
look back fifty years to the final months of the author's life
reveals a widely traveled and celebrated artist whose significance
was framed in national and international as well as regional terms.
Fifty Years after Faulkner bears out that expansive view,
reintroducing us to a writer whose work retains its ability to
provoke, intrigue, and surprise a variety of readerships.
Contributions by Tim Armstrong, Edward A. Chappell, W. Ralph
Eubanks, Amy A. Foley, Michael Gorra, Sherita L. Johnson, Andrew B.
Leiter, John T. Matthews, Julie Beth Napolin, Erin Penner,
Stephanie Rountree, Julia Stern, Jay Watson, and Randall Wilhelm In
1930, the same year he moved into Rowan Oak, a slave-built former
plantation home in his hometown of Oxford, Mississippi, William
Faulkner published his first work of fiction that gave serious
attention to the experience and perspective of an enslaved
individual. For the next two decades, Faulkner repeatedly returned
to the theme of slavery and to the figures of enslaved people in
his fiction, probing the racial, economic, and political contours
of his region, nation, and hemisphere in work such as The Sound and
the Fury; Light in August; Absalom, Absalom!; and Go Down, Moses.
Faulkner and Slavery is the first collection to address the myriad
legacies of African chattel slavery in the writings and personal
history of one of the twentieth century's most incisive authors on
US slavery and the long ordeal of race in the Americas.
Contributors to the volume examine the constitutive links among
slavery, capitalism, and modernity across Faulkner's oeuvre. They
study how the history of slavery at the University of Mississippi
informs writings like Absalom, Absalom! and trace how slavery's
topologies of the rectilinear grid or square run up against the
more reparative geography of the oval in Faulkner's narratives.
Contributors explore how the legacies of slavery literally sound
and resound across centuries of history, and across multiple novels
and stories in Faulkner's fictional county of Yoknapatawpha, and
they reveal how the author's remodeling work on his own residence
brought him into an uncomfortable engagement with the spatial and
architectural legacies of chattel slavery in north Mississippi.
Faulkner and Slavery offers a timely intervention not only in the
critical study of the writer's work but in ongoing national and
global conversations about the afterlives of slavery and the
necessary work of antiracism.
At the turn of the millennium, the Martinican novelist Edouard
Glissant offered the bold prediction that ""Faulkner's oeuvre will
be made complete when it is revisited and made vital by African
Americans,"" a goal that ""will be achieved by a radically 'other'
reading."" In the spirit of Glissant's prediction, this collection
places William Faulkner's literary oeuvre in dialogue with a
hemispheric canon of black writing from the United States and the
Caribbean. The volume's seventeen essays and poetry selections
chart lines of engagement, dialogue, and reciprocal resonance
between Faulkner and his black precursors, contemporaries, and
successors in the Americas. Contributors place Faulkner's work in
illuminating conversation with writings by Paul Laurence Dunbar, W.
E. B. Du Bois, James Weldon Johnson, Jean Toomer, Nella Larsen,
Claude McKay, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Ernest J. Gaines, Marie
Vieux-Chauvet, Toni Morrison, Edwidge Danticat, Randall Kenan,
Edward P. Jones, and Natasha Trethewey, along with the musical
artistry of Mississippi bluesman Charley Patton. In addition, five
contemporary African American poets offer their own creative
responses to Faulkner's writings, characters, verbal art, and
historical example. In these ways, the volume develops a
comparative approach to the Faulkner oeuvre that goes beyond the
compelling but limiting question of influence - who read whom,
whose works draw from whose - to explore the confluences between
Faulkner and black writing in the hemisphere.
William Faulkner's first ventures into print culture began far from
the world of highbrow New York publishing houses such as Boni &
Liveright or Random House and little magazines such as the
Double-Dealer. With that diverse publishing history in mind, this
collection explores Faulkner's multifaceted engagements, as writer
and reader, with the United States and international print cultures
of his era, along with how these cultures have mediated his
relationship with various twentieth- and twenty-first-century
audiences. These essays address the place of Faulkner and his
writings in the creation, design, publishing, marketing, reception,
and collecting of books, in the culture of twentieth-century
magazines, journals, newspapers, and other periodicals (from pulp
to avantgarde), in the history of modern readers and readerships,
and in the construction and cultural politics of literary
authorship. Several contributors focus on Faulkner's sensational
1931 novel Sanctuary to illustrate the author's multifaceted
relationship to the print ecology of his time, tracing the novel's
path from the wellsprings of Faulkner's artistic vision to the
novel's reception among reviewers, tastemakers, intellectuals, and
other readers of the early 1930s. Other essayists discuss
Faulkner's early notices, the Saturday Review of Literature,
Saturday Evening Post, men's magazines of the 1950s, and Cold War
modernism. With contributions by: Greg Barnhisel, John N. Duvall,
Kristin Fujie, Sarah E. Gardner, Jaime Harker, Kristi Rowan
Humphreys, Robert Jackson, Mary A. Knighton, Jennifer Nolan, Carl
Rollyson, Tim A. Ryan, Jay Satterfield, Erin A. Smith, and
Yung-Hsing Wu.
Jay Watson argues that southern literary studies has been
overidealized and dominated by intellectual history for too long.
In "Reading for the Body," he calls for the field to be
rematerialized and grounded in an awareness of the human body as
the site where ideas, including ideas about the U.S. South itself,
ultimately happen.
Employing theoretical approaches to the body developed by thinkers
such as Karl Marx, Colette Guillaumin, Elaine Scarry, and Friedrich
Kittler, Watson also draws on histories of bodily representation to
mine a century of southern fiction for its insights into problems
that have preoccupied the region and nation alike: slavery, Jim
Crow, and white supremacy; the marginalization of women; the impact
of modernization; the issue of cultural authority and leadership;
and the legacy of the Vietnam War. He focuses on the specific
bodily attributes of hand, voice, and blood and the deeply embodied
experiences of pain, illness, pregnancy, and war to offer new
readings of a distinguished group of literary artists who turned
their attention to the South: Mark Twain, Jean Toomer, Zora Neale
Hurston, William Faulkner, Richard Wright, Katherine Anne Porter,
Bobbie Ann Mason, and Walker Percy.
In producing an intensely embodied U.S. literature these writers,
Watson argues, were by turns extending and interrogating a
centuries-old tradition in U.S. print culture, in which the
recalcitrant materiality of the body serves as a trope for the
regional alterity of the South. "Reading for the Body "makes a
powerful case for the body as an important methodological resource
for a new southern studies.
The recent spatial turn in social theory and cultural studies opens
up exciting new possibilities for the study of William Faulkner's
literature. The fictional domains of Yoknapatawpha County and
Jefferson, Mississippi, are not simply imagined communities but
imaginative geographies of remarkable complexity and detail, as
evidenced by the maps Faulkner created of his ""apocryphal""
county. Exploring the diverse functions of space in Faulkner's
artistic vision, the eleven essays in Faulkner's Geographies delve
deep into Yoknapatawpha but also reach beyond it, to uncover
unsuspected connections and flows linking local, regional,
national, hemispheric, and global geographies in Faulkner's
writings. Individual contributions examine the influence of the
plantation as a land-use regime on Faulkner's imagination of north
Mississippi's geography; the emergence of ""micro-Souths"" as a
product of modern migratory patterns in the urban North of
Faulkner's fiction; the enlistment of the author's work in the
geopolitics of the cultural Cold War during the 1950s; the
historical and literary affiliations between Faulkner's Deep South
and Greater Mexico; the local and idiosyncratic as alternatives to
region and nation; the unique intersection of regional and
metropolitan geographies that Faulkner encountered as a novice
writer immersed in the literary culture of New Orleans; the uses of
feminist geography to trace the interplay of gender, space, and
movement; and the circulation of Caribbean and ""Black South""
spaces and itineraries through Faulkner's masterpiece, Absalom,
Absalom!By bringing new attention to the function of space, place,
mapping, and movement in his literature, Faulkner's Geographies
seeks to redraw the very boundaries of Faulkner studies.
Contributions by Josephine Adams, Jeff Allred, Garry Bertholf,
Maxwell Cassity, John N. Duvall, Katherine Henninger, Maude Hines,
Robert Jackson, Julie Beth Napolin, Rebecca Nisetich, George Porter
Thomas, Jay Watson, and Yuko Yamamoto If it seems outrageous to
suggest that one of the twentieth century’s most important
literary cartographers of the private recesses of consciousness is
also among its great novelists of family, William Faulkner
nonetheless fits the bill on both counts. Family played an outsized
role in both his life and his writings, often in deeply problematic
ways, surfacing across his oeuvre in a dazzling range of distorted,
defamiliarized, and transgressive forms, while on other occasions
serving as a crucible for crushing forces of conformity,
convention, and tradition. The dozen essays featured in this
collection approach Faulkner’s many families—actual and
imagined—as especially revealing windows to his work and his
world. In Faulkner's Families, contributors explore the role of the
child in Faulkner’s vision of family and regional society;
sibling relations throughout the author's body of work; the
extension of family networks beyond blood lineage and across racial
lines; the undutiful daughters of Yoknapatawpha County; the
critical power of family estrangement and subversive genealogies in
Faulkner’s imagination; forms of queer and interspecies kinship;
the epidemiological imagination of Faulkner’s notorious Snopes
family as social contagion; the experiences of the African American
families who worked on the writer’s Greenfield Farm property; and
Faulkner’s role in promoting a Cold War–era ideology of "the
family of man" in post–World War II Japan.
William Faulkner wrote during a tumultuous period in southern
racial consciousness, between the years of the enactment of Jim
Crow and the beginnings of the civil rights movement in the South.
Throughout the writer's career, racial paradigms were in flux, and
these shifting notions are reflected in Faulkner's prose.
Faulkner's fiction contains frequent questions about the ways in
which white Americans view themselves with regard to race along
with challenges to the racial codes and standards of the region,
and complex portrayals of the interactions between blacks and
whites. Throughout his work, Faulkner contests white identity--its
performance by whites and those passing for white, its role in
shaping the South, and its assumption of normative identity in
opposition to non-white "Others." This is true even in novels
without a strong visible African American presence, such as "As I
Lay Dying," "The Hamlet," "The Town," and "The Mansion."
"Faulkner and Whiteness" explores the ways in which Faulkner's
fiction addresses and destabilizes the concept of whiteness in
American culture. Collectively, the essays argue that whiteness, as
part of the Nobel Laureate's consistent querying of racial
dynamics, is a central element. This anthology places Faulkner's
oeuvre--and scholarly views of it--in the contexts of its
contemporary literature and academic trends exploring race and
texts.
Winner of the 2020 C. Hugh Holman Award William Faulkner has
enjoyed a secure reputation as American modernism's foremost
fiction writer, and as a landmark figure in international literary
modernism, for well over half a century. Less secure, however, has
been any scholarly consensus about what those modernist credentials
actually entail. Over recent decades, there have been lively
debates in modernist studies over the who, what, where, when, and
how of the surprisingly elusive phenomena of modernism and
modernity. This book broadens and deepens an understanding of
Faulkner's oeuvre by following some of the guiding questions and
insights of new modernism studies scholarship into understudied
aspects of Faulkner's literary modernism and his cultural
modernity. William Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity explores
Faulkner's rural Mississippians as modernizing subjects in their
own right rather than mere objects of modernization; traces the new
speed gradients, media formations, and intensifications of sensory
and affective experience that the twentieth century brought to the
cities and countryside of the US South; maps the fault lines in
whiteness as a racial modernity under construction and contestation
during the Jim Crow period; resituates Faulkner's fictional
Yoknapatawpha County within the transnational counter-modernities
of the Black Atlantic; and follows the author's imaginative
engagement with modern biopolitics through his late work A Fable, a
novel Faulkner hoped to make his 'magnum o.' By returning to the
utterly uncontroversial fact of Faulkner's modernism with a
critical sensibility sharpened by new modernism studies, William
Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity aims to spark further
reappraisal of a distinguished and quite dazzling body of fiction.
Perhaps even make it new.
Contributions by Eric Gary Anderson, Melanie R. Anderson, Jodi A.
Byrd, Gina Caison, Robbie Ethridge, Patricia Galloway, LeAnne Howe,
John Wharton Lowe, Katherine M. B. Osburn, Melanie Benson Taylor,
Annette Trefzer, and Jay Watson From new insights into the
Chickasaw sources and far-reaching implications of Faulkner's
fictional place-name ""Yoknapatawpha,"" to discussions that reveal
the potential for indigenous land-, family-, and story-based
methodologies to deepen understanding of Faulkner's fiction
(including but not limited to the novels and stories he devoted
explicitly to Native American topics), the eleven essays of this
volume advance the critical analysis of Faulkner's Native South and
the Native South's Faulkner. Critics push beyond assessments of the
historical accuracy of his Native representations and the colonial
hybridity of his Indian characters. Essayists turn instead to
indigenous intellectual culture for new models, problems, and
questions to bring to Faulkner studies. Along the way, readers are
treated to illuminating comparisons between Faulkner's writings and
the work of a number of Native American authors, filmmakers, tribal
leaders, and historical figures. Faulkner and the Native South
brings together Native and non-Native scholars in a stimulating and
often surprising critical dialogue about the indigenous wellsprings
of Faulkner's creative energies and about Faulkner's own
complicated presence in Native American literary history.
A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos,
University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program.
Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. A Jewish
Childhood in the Muslim Mediterranean brings together the
fascinating personal stories of Jewish writers, scholars, and
intellectuals who came of age in lands where Islam was the dominant
religion and everyday life was infused with the politics of the
French imperial project. Prompted by novelist Leïla Sebbar to
reflect on their childhoods, these writers offer literary portraits
that gesture to a universal condition while also shedding light on
the exceptional nature of certain experiences. The childhoods
captured here are undeniably Jewish, but they are also Moroccan,
Algerian, Tunisian, Egyptian, Lebanese, and Turkish; each essay
thus testifies to the multicultural, multilingual, and multi-faith
community into which its author was born. The present translation
makes this unique collection available to an English-speaking
public for the first time. The original version, published in
French in 2012, was awarded the Prix Haïm Zafrani, a prize given
by the Elie Wiesel Institute of Jewish Studies to a literary
project that valorizes Jewish civilization in the Muslim world.
Fossil-Fuel Faulkner is the first book-length study of a single
writer in the emerging field of the energy humanities. As we try to
imagine our way beyond a deeply problematic fossil energy regime
that depletes and degrades the planet and sharpens the gap between
Global North and Global South and move toward as more just and
sustainable energy future, there is much to learn from how previous
generations imagined the modern transition into a
hydrocarbon-fueled world from the solar- and muscle-powered order
that preceded it, and from how they imagined the consequences of
that transition, including the new cultural forms it elicited and
the new social problems it created. Jay Watson turns to the life
and writings of William Faulkner, creator of one of the richest
imaginative landscapes in American literary history, for new
insights into the deep-reaching connections linking the extraction,
production, and use of energy resources in his native US South to
its histories of slavery and Jim Crow, its ecologies of disruption
and despoilation, the logic of its cultural practices, and the
nuances of literary form. Surveying the author's personal and
imaginative engagements with coal and oil, with modern automobility
and the road narrative, and with the profligate energies of the sun
and the human animal, Fossil-Fuel Faulkner explores nearly all of
Faulkner's novels and over a dozen of his short stories, and
reveals the author to be one of petromodernity's keenest
chroniclers and critics.
Contributions by W. Fitzhugh Brundage, Jordan Burke, Rebecca
Bennett Clark, James C. Cobb, Anna Creadick, Colin Dayan, Wai Chee
Dimock, Sarah E. Gardner, Hannah Godwin, Brooks E. Hefner, Andrew
B. Leiter, Sean McCann, Conor Picken, Natalie J. Ring, Calvin
Schermerhorn, and Jay Watson. William Faulkner remains a
historian's writer. A distinguished roster of historians have
referenced Faulkner in their published work. They are drawn to him
as a fellow historian, a shaper of narrative reflections on the
meaning of the past; as a historiographer, a theorist, and
dramatist of the fraught enterprise of doing history; and as a
historical figure himself, especially following his mid-century
emergence as a public intellectual after winning the Nobel Prize
for Literature. This volume brings together historians and literary
scholars to explore the many facets of Faulkner's relationship to
history: the historical contexts of his novels and stories; his
explorations of the historiographic imagination; his engagement
with historical figures from both the regional and national past;
his influence on professional historians; his pursuit of alternate
modes of temporal awareness; and the histories of print culture
that shaped the production, reception, and criticism of Faulkner's
work. Contributors draw on the history of development in the
Mississippi Valley, the construction of Confederate memory, the
history and curriculum of Harvard University, twentieth-century
debates over police brutality and temperance reform, the history of
modern childhood, and the literary histories of anti-slavery
writing and pulp fiction to illuminate Faulkner's work. Others in
the collection explore the meaning of Faulkner's fiction for such
professional historians as C. Vann Woodward and Albert Bushnell
Hart. In these ways and more, Faulkner and History offers fresh
insights into one of the most persistent and long-recognized
elements of the Mississippian's artistic vision.
Contributions by Ted Atkinson, Gloria J. Burgess, David A. Davis,
Sarah E. Gardner, Richard Godden, Ryan Heryford, Robert Jackson,
Gavin Jones, Mary A. Knighton, Peter Lurie, John T. Matthews, Myka
Tucker-Abramson, Michael Wainwright, Jay Watson, and Michael
Zeitlin The matter of money touches a writer's life at every
point-in the need to make ends meet; in dealings with agents,
editors, publishers, and bookstores; and in the choice of subject
matter and the minutiae of imagined worlds. William Faulkner's
Yoknapatawpha was no exception. The people and communities he wrote
about stayed deeply entangled in personal, national, and even
global networks of industry, commerce, and finance, as did the
author himself. Faulkner's economic biography often followed, but
occasionally bucked, the tumultuous economic trends of the
twentieth century. The Faulkner met within these pages is among
modern literature's most incisive and encyclopedic critics of what
one contemporary theorist calls the madness of economic reason.
Faulkner and Money brings together a distinguished group of
scholars to explore the economic contexts of Faulkner's life and
work, to follow the proverbial money toward new insights into the
Nobel Laureate and new questions about his art. Essays in this
collection address economies of debt and gift giving in Intruder in
the Dust; the legacies of commodity fetishism in Sanctuary and of
twentieth-century capitalism's financial turn in The Town; the
pegging of self-esteem to financial acumen in the career of The
Sound and the Fury's Jason Compson; the representational challenges
posed by poverty and failure in Faulkner's Frenchman's Bend tales;
the economics of regional readership and the Depression-era
literary market; the aesthetic, monetary, and psychological rewards
of writing for Hollywood; and the author's role as benefactor to an
aspiring African American college student in the 1950s.
Contributions by Ted Atkinson, Michael P. Bibler, Deborah Clarke,
David A. Davis, David M. Earle, Jason D. Fichtel, Elizabeth
Fielder, Joseph Fruscione, Matthew Pratt Guterl, Patrick E. Horn,
Cheryl Lester, Jessica Martell, Sharon Monteith, Richard C.
Moreland, Alan Nadel, Julie Beth Napolin, Francois Pitavy, Ramon
Saldivar, Hortense J. Spillers, Terrell L. Tebbetts, Zackary
Vernon, Randall Wilhelm, and Charles Reagan Wilson These essays
examine issues across the wide arc of Faulkner's extraordinary
career, from his aesthetic apprenticeship in the visual arts, to
late-career engagements with the Cold War, the civil rights
movement, and beyond, to the place of death in his artistic vision
and the long, varied afterlives he and his writings have enjoyed in
literature and popular culture. Contributors deliver stimulating
reassessments of Faulkner's first novel, Soldiers' Pay; his final
novel, The Reivers; and much of the important work between.
Scholars explore how a broad range of elite and lowbrow cultural
forms - plantation diaries, phonograph records, pulp magazines -
shaped Faulkner's capacious imagination and how his works were
translated into such media as film and modern dance. Essays place
Faulkner's writings in dialogue with those of fellow
twentieth-century authors including W. E. B. Du Bois, Ernest
Hemingway, Richard Hall, and Jayne Anne Phillips; locate his work
in relation to African American intellectual currents and Global
South artistic traditions; and weigh the rewards as well as the
risks of dislodging Faulkner from the canonical position he
currently occupies. While Faulkner studies has cultivated an image
of the novelist as a neglected genius who toiled in obscurity, a
look back fifty years to the final months of the author's life
reveals a widely traveled and celebrated artist whose significance
was framed in national and international as well as regional terms.
Fifty Years after Faulkner bears out that expansive view,
reintroducing us to a writer whose work retains its ability to
provoke, intrigue, and surprise a variety of readerships.
From new insights into the Chickasaw sources and far-reaching
implications of Faulkner's fictional place-name "Yoknapatawpha," to
discussions that reveal the potential for indigenous land-,
family-, and story-based methodologies to deepen understanding of
Faulkner's fiction (including but not limited to the novels and
stories he devoted explicitly to Native American topics), the
eleven essays of this volume advance the critical analysis of
Faulkner's Native South and the Native South's Faulkner. Critics
push beyond assessments of the historical accuracy of his Native
representations and the colonial hybridity of his Indian
characters. Essayists turn instead to indigenous intellectual
culture for new models, problems, and questions to bring to
Faulkner studies. Along the way, readers are treated to
illuminating comparisons between Faulkner's writings and the work
of a number of Native American authors, filmmakers, tribal leaders,
and historical figures. Faulkner and the Native South brings
together Native and non-Native scholars in a stimulating and often
surprising critical dialogue about the indigenous wellsprings of
Faulkner's creative energies and about Faulkner's own complicated
presence in Native American literary history. Contributions by Eric
Gary Anderson, Melanie R. Anderson, Jodi A. Byrd, Gina Caison,
Robbie Ethridge, Patricia Galloway, LeAnne Howe, John Wharton Lowe,
Katherine M. B. Osburn, Melanie Benson Taylor, Annette Trefzer, and
Jay Watson.
With contributions by Greg Barnhisel, John N. Duvall, Kristin
Fujie, Sarah E. Gardner, Jaime Harker, Kristi Rowan Humphreys,
Robert Jackson, Mary A. Knighton, Jennifer Nolan, Carl Rollyson,
Tim A. Ryan, Jay Satterfield, Erin A. Smith, Jay Watson, and
Yung-Hsing Wu.William Faulkner's first ventures into print culture
began far from the world of highbrow New York publishing houses
such as Boni & Liveright or Random House and little magazines
such as the Double Dealer. With that diverse publishing history in
mind, this collection explores Faulkner's multifaceted engagements,
as writer and reader, with the US and international print cultures
of his era, along with how these cultures have mediated his
relationship with various twentieth- and twenty-first-century
Audiences. These essays address the place of Faulkner and his
writings in the creation, design, publishing, marketing, reception,
and collecting of books, in the culture of twentieth-century
magazines, journals, newspapers, and other periodicals (from pulp
to avant-garde), in the history of modern readers and readerships,
and in the construction and cultural politics of literary
authorship. Several Contributors focus on Faulkner's sensational
1931 novel Sanctuary to illustrate the author's multifaceted
relationship to the print ecology of his time, tracing the novel's
path from the wellsprings of Faulkner's artistic vision to the
novel's reception among reviewers, tastemakers, intellectuals, and
other readers of the early 1930s. Other essayists discuss
Faulkner's early notices, the Saturday Review of Literature,
Saturday Evening Post, men's magazines of the 1950s, and Cold War
modernism.
Containing Two-Hundred Illustrations Of The Notable Bridges Of The
World, Ancient And Modern, With Descriptive, Historical And
Legendary Text.
At the turn of the millennium, the Martinican novelist Edouard
Glissant offered the bold prediction that ""Faulkner's oeuvre will
be made complete when it is revisited and made vital by African
Americans,"" a goal that ""will be achieved by a radically 'other'
reading."" In the spirit of Glissant's prediction, this collection
places William Faulkner's literary oeuvre in dialogue with a
hemispheric canon of black writing from the United States and the
Caribbean. The volume's seventeen essays and poetry selections
chart lines of engagement, dialogue, and reciprocal resonance
between Faulkner and his black precursors, contemporaries, and
successors in the Americas. Contributors place Faulkner's work in
illuminating conversation with writings by Paul Laurence Dunbar, W.
E. B. Du Bois, James Weldon Johnson, Jean Toomer, Nella Larsen,
Claude McKay, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Ernest J. Gaines, Marie
Vieux-Chauvet, Toni Morrison, Edwidge Danticat, Randall Kenan,
Edward P. Jones, and Natasha Trethewey, along with the musical
artistry of Mississippi bluesman Charley Patton. In addition, five
contemporary African American poets offer their own creative
responses to Faulkner's writings, characters, verbal art, and
historical example. In these ways, the volume develops a
comparative approach to the Faulkner oeuvre that goes beyond the
compelling but limiting question of influence--who read whom, whose
works draw from whose--to explore the confluences between Faulkner
and black writing in the hemisphere.
Contributions by Josephine Adams, Jeff Allred, Garry Bertholf,
Maxwell Cassity, John N. Duvall, Katherine Henninger, Maude Hines,
Robert Jackson, Julie Beth Napolin, Rebecca Nisetich, George Porter
Thomas, Jay Watson, and Yuko Yamamoto If it seems outrageous to
suggest that one of the twentieth century’s most important
literary cartographers of the private recesses of consciousness is
also among its great novelists of family, William Faulkner
nonetheless fits the bill on both counts. Family played an outsized
role in both his life and his writings, often in deeply problematic
ways, surfacing across his oeuvre in a dazzling range of distorted,
defamiliarized, and transgressive forms, while on other occasions
serving as a crucible for crushing forces of conformity,
convention, and tradition. The dozen essays featured in this
collection approach Faulkner’s many families—actual and
imagined—as especially revealing windows to his work and his
world. In Faulkner's Families, contributors explore the role of the
child in Faulkner’s vision of family and regional society;
sibling relations throughout the author's body of work; the
extension of family networks beyond blood lineage and across racial
lines; the undutiful daughters of Yoknapatawpha County; the
critical power of family estrangement and subversive genealogies in
Faulkner’s imagination; forms of queer and interspecies kinship;
the epidemiological imagination of Faulkner’s notorious Snopes
family as social contagion; the experiences of the African American
families who worked on the writer’s Greenfield Farm property; and
Faulkner’s role in promoting a Cold War–era ideology of "the
family of man" in post–World War II Japan.
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