YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Faulkner As I Lay Dying
Essays 181 - 210
beating his wife which illustrates a theme of the helpless, and perhaps primarily the helplessness of women in society controlled ...
of her father and her eventual release from her house, little is known of the first thirty years of her life in addition to the li...
important character, the daughter eventually falls by the wayside. His daughter is of concern until we find out that the man she...
taught, by her father, those attitudes that provide them the social status they were born into, a class common to the traditional ...
says she is experiencing anything but sorrow and despair. During the times that this story takes place, a woman was not expected...
In five pages these two stories are compared in terms of their presentations of class consciousness where distinctions are clearly...
In five pages this paper examines the play on words each other employs in a consideration of the parallels between Daniel Quinn an...
This paper offers an explication of the story in three pages and includes setting, tone, style, characters, summary, narrator, the...
The ways in which Faulkner portrays the themes of death and love in these two short stories are considered in five pages. There a...
In three pages this paper examines the primary characters in these two stories in terms of society's treatment of them and human p...
(without excluding the importance of the past), where everything is not spelled out neatly for the reader. The reader must interp...
there is an appearance of such. While Lomans life is all about lies and innuendo, Snopess emotions are simply lacking. He is just ...
The way in which protagonists in these respective short stories discover they are different than what their parents want them to b...
white society or in any way "rock the boat". As Jennifer Poulos observes, they are, in particular, taught to be quiet, and to refr...
The ways in which female protagonists are controlled by men are discussed in a comparative analysis of these literary works consis...
In eleven pages the similarities and differences that exist among the male protagonists and their parentages in these works are co...
In 5 pages this paper discusses the North and South oppositional relationship as depicted in these stories by Bierce and Faulkner....
In five pages the viewpoint's functions in these respective stories are contrasted and compared. There are no other sources liste...
assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression -- a slight hyster...
that her father is dead. Therefore, she reasons that he is merely resting and is still capable of making decisions for her. She wo...
with the ideas of the era have made her a prime target for heartache, as her suitor, not as devoted as Ms. Emily thinks, goes out ...
of the Compson family, the offspring of the pioneer Jason Lycurgus Compson" (Classicnotes [1]). Within the family we see a very Fa...
story (Sparknotes). Her husband is Roskus, a man who suffers greatly from rheumatism, a condition that will kill him. T.P. is...
all together. The characters are not three-dimensional in that they are more caricatures of types of people. Whereas Faulkner give...
in humanity until he hears the voice of his wife. When he stumbles out of the woods the next morning, he is a changed man. He ha...
with one last chance at a relationship in the form of Homer Barron, a day laborer from the North. When the community realized that...
town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the women mostly out of curiosity ...
the wealth that lingers in the background. Yet, this rags to riches story includes murder and mayhem and the fact that Sutpen earn...
extent to which she, as an unchanging artifact of her own times, is overpowered by death despite struggling against it at all poin...
she retreated into security of the family homestead, which like the lady of the house, was also dying a slow death. Before the Ci...