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William Faulkner (1897-1962), a major figure of contemporary
American literature, wrote novels and short stories combining
stream-of-consciousness narrative with linguistic innovations
and vivid characterization. His better known works include
"The Sound and the Fury", "Absalom Absalom!", and "The Reivers",
which won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. William Cuthbert
Faulkner, b. New Albany, Miss., Sept.
25, 1897, d. July 6, 1962,
In a career lasting more than three decades, Faulkner published 19
novels, more than 80 short stories, 2 books of poems, and numerous essays. Like
Thomas Mann and James Joyce, writers he greatly admired, Faulkner depicted
traditional society not only in its own terms but also in terms of
ageless human dramas.
Faulkner's principal setting is Yoknapatawpha County, a fictional
domain loosely based upon places and subjects near to him in his youth. His family
had played a significant role in Mississippi history. His great-grandfather, the
model for the senior John Sartoris of several novels, was a lawyer,
soldier, painter, railroad builder, poet, and novelist and was twice
acquitted of murder charges. Faulkner grew up surrounded by
traditional lore--family and regional stories, rural folk wisdom and
humor, heroic and tragic accounts of the War Between the States, and
tales of the hunting code and the Southern gentleman's ideal of
conduct. In his lifetime and in his works, Faulkner bore witness to
great political, economic, and social changes in the life of the
South.
Although Oxford, Miss., was in some ways rural, it was also the seat
of the state university, the county government, and the federal district court,
and it had ties to major cultural centers. A voracious reader, more
schooled than he would ever admit, Faulkner began writing in his
early teens. As a young man he produced hand-lettered and
hand-illustrated books for his friends, including books of poems, at
least one esoteric play, an allegorical story, and a children's tale.
These works show his early commitment to a writer's life.
Faulkner's early years were not confined to the countryside that he
eventually shaped into Yoknapatawpha. Before the 1918 armistice, he
trained in Toronto as a fighter pilot with the Royal Air Force. He
traveled to New York City, New Orleans, and Europe. He read and
wrote, absorbing the modernist influences that were changing the face
of 20th-century art. In the mid-1920s, Faulkner lived among writers
and artists in the French Quarter of New Orleans and received
encouragement for his fiction, most notably from Sherwood Anderson.
He had come to New Orleans with a book of poems to his credit, The
Marble Faun (1924), and he there completed his first novel, Soldiers'
Pay (1926), about the homecoming of a fatally wounded aviator.
The Mature Years
After travel abroad and the publication of his second novel,
Mosquitoes (1927), about bohemian life in New Orleans, Faulkner
returned to Oxford, Miss., apparently on Anderson's advice, to begin
a remarkable decade of writing. Sartoris (1929) was his first major
exploration of Yoknapatawpha County, what he called his "little
postage stamp of native soil," and he exploited it fictionally during
the following 24 years, with occasional side trips.
Faulkner's next novel, THE SOUND AND THE FURY (1929), displayed
startling progress. It showed that he had mastered his material, demonstrated a
rich variety of styles, and brought to bear techniques and ideas then
pervasive in literature and art. Established as an author, Faulkner
continued to write novels, always experimenting with new forms. As I
Lay Dying (1930) was a tour de force in stream of consciousness.
Subsequent works included the tightly knit novel LIGHT IN AUGUST
(1932), the monumentally complex narrative ABSALOM, ABSALOM! (1936),
and the episodic Go Down, Moses (1942), containing his most famous
short piece, "The BEAR." A Fable (1954) and The Reivers (1962) each
won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, but Faulkner's later novels were
generally considered less successful.
Faulkner set ambitious goals for himself and often considered his
books failures because they did not measure up to his expectations. Others thought
differently, however. Faulkner received the 1949 Nobel Prize for literature. A
humanist, he repeatedly explored the question of human freedom and the obstacles
to it--racism, regimentation, shame, fear, pride, and overly abstract
principles. In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Faulkner summed up
a lifetime of writing: "The poet's voice need not merely be the
record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him
endure and prevail." THOMAS L.
Bibliography: Adams, Richard P., Faulkner: Myth and Motion (1968); Blotner,Joseph, Faulkner: A Biography, 2 vols. (1972) and, as ed., Selected Letters(1977); Brooks, Cleanth, William Faulkner: The Yoknapatawpha County (1964) and William Faulkner: Toward Yoknapatawpha and Beyond (1978); Howe, Irving, William Faulkner: A Critical Study, 3d ed. (1975); Karl, Frederick R., William Faulkner: American Writer (1989); McHaney, Thomas, William Faulkner: A Reference Guide (1976); Meriwether, James B., Essays, Speeches, and Public Letters of William Faulkner (1965); Meriwether, James B., and Millgate, Michael, Lion in the Garden: Interviews with William Faulkner, 1926-1962 (1968); Millgate, Michael, The Achievement of William Faulkner (1966); Reed, Joseph W., Faulkner's Narrative (1973); Waggoner, Hyatt, William Faulkner: From Jefferson to the World (1959); Wagner, Linda, ed., William Faulkner: Four Decades of Criticism (1973) |