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2000

6 x 9 in.
271 pp., 11 halftones, 9 line drawings

ISBN: 978-0-292-79151-0
$25.00, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $16.75

This book is a digital facsimile of the 2000 edition.

 
 

The University of Texas Press will be closed for Thanksgiving on November 26 and 27; we will reopen on Monday, November 30.

 
 
     

William Faulkner
Self-Presentation and Performance

By James G. Watson

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"This is the work of a mature Faulkner scholar in full command of the entire range of Faulkner studies, past and present, and will I have no doubt be a major step forward in Faulkner studies."

—Noel Polk, Professor of English, University of Southern Mississippi

In his life and writings, William Faulkner continually created and "performed" selves. Even in letters, he often played a part—gentleman dandy, soldier, farmer—while in his fictions these and other personae are counterpoised against one another to create a world of controlled chaos, made in Faulkner's own protean image and reflective of his own multiple sense of self.

In this groundbreaking book, James Watson draws on the entire Faulkner canon, including letters and photographs, to decipher the complicated ways in which Faulkner put himself forth as the artist he felt himself to be through written performances and displays based on the life he actually lived and the ones he imagined living. The topics Watson treats include the overtly performative aspects of The Sound and the Fury, self-presentation and performance in private records of Faulkner's life, the ways in which his complicated marriage and his relationships to male mentors underlie his fictions' recurring motifs of marriages and fatherhood, Faulkner's readings of Melville, Hawthorne, and Thoreau and the problematics of authorial sovereignty, his artist-as-God creation of a fictional cosmos, and the epistolary relationships with women that lie in the correspondence behind Requiem for a Nun.

James G. Watson is Professor of English at the University of Tulsa.

Literary Modernism Series
Thomas F. Staley, series editor


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