Faulkner's World

  • Approx. Words: 1,125
  • Pages: 5
  • Price: $54.75

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Faulkner's World

...many respects to the critic studying his work for clues as to his views on women, racial issues and the South. His attitude, indeed, seems to betray ambivalence toward each of these most important elements in his work. His portrayals of all three, though on the surface quite unflattering and indeed derisive at times, still shows much love, even longing in the midst of his harshest and most brutal exposure. of their deepest secrets and most profound contradictions and weaknesses. He seems both attracted and repelled, even by the women to whom he is most attracted. And though his revulsion and derision for the racial system that defined and ruled the South of his experience stands out starkly in his work, his longing for that system and fear of what might replace it comes through strongly at times.
His ambivalence is certainly easy to see in his treatment of women, both in his works and in his personal life. His stories are peopled with two distinct kinds of women: the weak, fragile...

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