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Not My Essay
Primary Texts:
William Faulkner, «A Rose for Emily», compendium.
Sources:
M. Thomas Inge (ed). William Faulkner: A Rose for Emily. Merill Literary Casebook Ser. 1970.
The seminar started with two good presentations, one on The Great Gatsby, which we would return to the next day, and one on "A Rose for Emily". The student cleverly identified time and perspective as central issues in the short story.
Setting:
It is in Jefferson, the Southern town in Yoknapathapwa county that Faulkner often used as the setting of his novels.
Both the description of the town and the house indicate that the place is going through a process of transformation from old-style Southern aristocracy to a modern industrial town, with all the changes that come with it in terms of social codes and conventions.
The issue of the failed tax collection is a case in point. Emily is the remainding symbol of this older society and must be respected still. When Emily says: "See Sartoris", it need not necessarily mean that she thinks he is still alive. It may be a subtle way of saying that Sartoris remitted the taxes and it cannot be undone.
Narrative perspective:
First person narrator, a witness narrative.We readers in a sense join the «
Approximate Word count = 862
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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