William FaulknerF. Ungar Publishing Company, 1984 - 220 oldal William Faulkner was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1950. Since than studies of the writer have proliferated, approaching his work from various points of view. In a style at once compact, detailed and highly readable, Allan Warren Friedman combines the best features of all these approaches as he explores the life and career of this troubling (and troubled) author in a critical overview. He documents the unity of Faulkner's writing: the prevailing themes and settings as well as the writer's failure, in Faulkner's own estimation, to express fully and successfully all that he has hoped. In spite of -- or perhaps because of -- his own emotional and psychological problems, Faulkner succeeded in creating characters and novels that embody his vision, which was dominated by a pattern of failure and repetition. Professor Friedman depicts the extraordinary work of the greatest American novelist of this century. ISBN 0-8044-2218-4 : $15.50. |
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25. oldal
... initially inspired a sense of freedom and adventure . And that freedom was as yet uncontaminated by the connotations of speed and death that became associated with automobiles after World War I - largely because of men like Bayard ...
... initially inspired a sense of freedom and adventure . And that freedom was as yet uncontaminated by the connotations of speed and death that became associated with automobiles after World War I - largely because of men like Bayard ...
120. oldal
... initially intended it for the opening section of The Hamlet , found it tonally inappropriate when he actually came to create the first of his Snopes novels . Something from every novel of this period is included in The Portable Faulkner ...
... initially intended it for the opening section of The Hamlet , found it tonally inappropriate when he actually came to create the first of his Snopes novels . Something from every novel of this period is included in The Portable Faulkner ...
129. oldal
... initially and ultimately , the crucial issue of Go Down , Moses , strikes me as far worse . The book's first story , " Was , " begins with this static , verbless assertion about the significance of what happens to Ike ; the first ...
... initially and ultimately , the crucial issue of Go Down , Moses , strikes me as far worse . The book's first story , " Was , " begins with this static , verbless assertion about the significance of what happens to Ike ; the first ...
Tartalomjegyzék
in the Dust The Reivers | 15 |
The Sound and the Fury | 35 |
As I Lay Dying Light | 75 |
Copyright | |
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Absalom action Addie Addie's aint already Anse Bayard begins Benjy Benjy's Blotner book's Brooks brother Caddy Caddy's calls characters Chick Compson Darl Darl's dead death desperate Dilsey doomed Dust echo Eula fact failed failure father fiction finally Flags Flem Flem's Frenchman's Bend Fury Gavin Stevens grandfather Hamlet Henry Horace human Ike's Jason Jefferson Joe Christmas killed knew Lay Dying Letters Light in August Linda Lion living Lucius Mansion marriage McCaslin Mink's Mississippi moral Moses murder narrative narrator never novel obsessed past pattern perhaps Popeye Portable Faulkner published Pylon Quentin Quentin Compson Ratliff recounting Reivers repeated repetition Requiem Rosa Rosa's Sanctuary Sartoris says seems sense Sherwood Anderson Shreve Snopes trilogy Soldiers Sound story Sutpen tell Temple Temple's things Thomas Sutpen told Town Tull University Press Unvanquished Vardaman Wild Palms William Faulkner writing Yoknapatawpha Yoknapatawpha County