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Thursday, February 7, 2019

Faulkners Light in August - Setting :: Light August Essays

Light in August - Setting Most of Light in August is manage in the towns, villages, and countryside of the early 1930s Deep South. It is a land of racial prejudice and stern religion. Community ties are still strong an foreigner is really identifiable, and people gossip about their neighbors. In this part of the country, the former(prenominal) lives on, even physically. For example, the cabin in which Joe Christmas stays and in which Lena Grove gives birth is a slave cabin dating back to before the civilized War. And finally the South of this epoch is still close to nature. Right out-of-door the town are the woods. All these aspects of the setting lend themselves especially salutary to Faulkners favorite themes, for example, the relationships between the community and the individual and between the present and the past. merely Faulkners setting is quite specific. Faulkner modeled his fictional Yoknapatawpha County on Lafayette County, disseminated multiple s clerosis, and the city of Jefferson on his hometown, Oxford, and perhaps on neighboring Ripley as well. He describes his regions smells, sights, and sounds in love detail its chirping insects, its summer heat, its unique light. Some of Jefferson is a quite perfect rendering of Oxford--for example, the hilltop over which Lena first sees Jefferson in the distance, the ditch in which Joe Christmas briefly hides when pursued by Percy Grimm, almost all of the route Joe Christmas walks from the town barbershop through Freedman Town and back, and even the schedule of the Jefferson train that the Hineses take. (Note that the further Faulkner gets from Jefferson the less detailed his descriptions of setting often become.) Still, Faulkner felt free to substitute his sources whenever it suited his fictional purposes. He removed Oxfords intellectual center, the University of Mississippi. And Presbyterians are a larger percentage of fictional Jefferson than of real-world northern Mississippi. This change helps Faulkner explore his quest in Calvinist and Puritan forms of Christianity. Of course, you must also remember that Mississippi in 1932 was quite different from what it is today. At that time racial separatism was enshrined in law blacks were not permitted to vote, and many brutal lynchings occurred. Specific residences are almost always Faulkners fictional creations.

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