English 264 - FAULKNER

Fall
2012
01
4.00
Michael Gorra

MW 01:10-02:30

Smith College
19344-F12
SEELYE 304
mgorra@smith.edu
The sustained explosion of Faulkner's work in the dozen-odd years between The Sound and the Fury and Go Down, Moses has no parallel in American literature. He explored the microtones of consciousness and conducted the most radical of experiments in narrative form. At the same time he relied more heavily on the spoken vernacular than anyone since Mark Twain, and he made his "little postage stamp of native soil" in northern Mississippi stand for the world itself. We will read the great novels of his Yoknapatawpha cycle along with a selection of short stories, examining the linked and always problematic issues of race, region, and remembrance in terms of the forms that he invented to deal with them.

Not open to first-years

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.