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How (and why) to read William Faulkner - Sascha Morrell

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William Faulkner is considered one of America’s most remarkable and perplexing writers. He confused his audience intentionally, using complex sentences, unreliable narrators, and outlandish imagery. His body of work is shocking, inventive, hilarious, and challenging. So how can readers navigate his literary labyrinths? Sascha Morrell explains how to read one of literature's most confusing writers.

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William Faulkner is celebrated as one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. His distinctive prose style and experiments with narrative structure and point of view made him a trailblazer in American literary modernism, while his obsession with the burden of the past and the long shadow of slavery made him a pioneer in the Southern Gothic tradition

If you’re interested in learning more about the connections between theme, form, and style in some of Faulkner’s best fiction, Yale University’s Wai Chee Dimock has developed a series of free lectures for Open Yale Courses on Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury (Lectures 6 to 9), As I Lay Dying (Lectures 13 to 15) and Light in August (Lectures 22-25). Want to hear what Faulkner himself had to say about his work? The University of Virginia has an archive of audio recordings from 1957-58 when Faulkner was writer-in-residence there. In this clip, you can hear Faulkner talking about The Sound and the Fury as his favorite and “the most passionate” of his novels.

Populated with unforgettable characters and steeped in strange folklore, almost all of Faulkner’s fiction is set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County. Faulkner modeled Yoknapatawpha on his native Lafayette County in Mississippi, but he called it “a cosmos of my own,” and used it as a testing ground for examining some of the deepest fractures in Southern and United States history. You can view Faulkner’s hand-drawn maps of the fictional county, showing the locations of key events in his novels, on the University of Virginia’s Digital Yoknapatawpha project website. The same website has many other resources, including teaching resources, animated visualizations of character relationships in Faulkner’s novels, and manuscript pages from drafts of Faulkner’s novels, such as The Sound and the Fury. You can also explore some of the real-world spaces and stories that inspired Faulkner through the maps, images, and other resources on the Lafayette County Digital Museum website and through the photographs of Martin J. Dain for his series “Faulkner’s World.”

For a more intimate view of Faulkner’s literary life, take a look around William Faulkner’s home in Oxford, Mississippi through the Rowan Oak museum website, where you can also read a concise biography of the author.  

Although Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, and other Black writers have praised Faulkner’s nuanced treatment of Southern race relations and the traumatic legacies of slavery, Faulkner’s fiction is best read in conjunction with the work of authors better placed to represent Black experiences in the South. The Center for Black Literature offers some excellent reading suggestions from across a century of Black writing, as well as relevant scholarship. 

The University of Mississippi's William Faulkner on the Web archive is no longer updated, but has a vast array of additional resources on myriad aspects of Faulkner's life, writing, and relevant literary and historical contexts.  For updates on all things Faulker, including upcoming events and new publications, follow the William Faulkner Society on Twitter @faulknersociety. You can also visit their website here.

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Meet The Creators

  • Educator Sascha Morrell
  • Director Sarah Saidan, Naghmeh Farzaneh
  • Narrator Christina Greer
  • Storyboard Artist Sarah Saidan
  • Animator Naghmeh Farzaneh
  • Compositor Rafaël Massé
  • Art Director Naghmeh Farzaneh, Sarah Saidan
  • Composer Adam Larison
  • Sound Designer Sarah Saidan
  • Director of Production Gerta Xhelo
  • Produced by Abdallah Ewis, Anna Bechtol
  • Editorial Director Alex Rosenthal
  • Editorial Producer Dan Kwartler
  • Script Editor Iseult Gillespie
  • Fact-Checker Charles Wallace

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