The Sound and the Fury Essay

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    Random insignificant detail or symbolic motif? Often times in William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, the two are difficult to distinguish. However, when one takes a closer look outside Caddy’s and/or Quinton’s window, the fruit tree that “grew near to the house” reveals itself to be more significant than just another aspect of the setting. The tree symbolizes the growth of the Compson family, but is also, at least in part, ironically responsible for the destruction of the Compson name. It has

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    There's way too many things I want to say about the movie, Sound and Fury. Let me just start by saying that it's fascinating how every time I watch the movie, I learn something new or I have a new point of view on certain topics in the movie! That's only because I've learned many things or the way I view the world changed over time. So naturally what my beliefs and opinions were like 5 years ago are obviously not going to be similiar today. I'm thoroughly impressed with how Heather's parents were

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    Candice is the unspoken heroine in The Sound and The Fury. She couldn't tell her own story unlike her brothers. In the novel Caddy is the mother-figure and the family symbol for purity. For Benjy, Caddy is the mother and the provider of love, comfort and care. Benjy is familiar with Caddy's scent, '' Caddy smelled like trees.'' (Faulkner 29) is always repeated by him all the time. So, when Caddy loses her virginity in her teenage years, Benjy can tell something is different about Caddy because

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    in society now more than ever, but it wasn't always like this. Men in the time era of the novel were expected to be superior and in control of women. Women had to listen and obey the commands that were told to them without hesitation. In The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner, Candance Compson broke the traditions and expectations expected of her family. By doing this, the relationship she has with her brother Jason Compson is ruined; he now has a different perspective towards women because of

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    In William Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury” themes such as culture and names are displayed through the perspective of the formerly respectable Compson family. Led by Mr. and Mrs. Compson. Faulkner uses this novel to criticize the importance of reputations to southern families and to criticize the culture of Post Bellum society. Criticizing society was something relatively new at this time, resulting in this novel becoming a leader in the movement, ushering in a new style of writing. Protagonists:

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    In the novel, The Sound and the Fury, William Faulkner uses three different narrators who have distinct diction and syntax. These three narrators are the brothers of the Compson family. Faulkner develops these characters through their diverse language, such as Benjamin’s inability to make sense of words, Quentin’s educated intellect, and Jason’s anger and hatred. Faulkner clearly uses each of the character’s diction to show unique problems that trouble each of them, as well as difficulties that the

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    A virgin woman is the best woman, women need the protection of men, women are the caregivers of the family, and the list goes on. These are some of the basic conceptions of femininity. In the novel, The Sound and The Fury by William Faulkner, he affirms many of these conceptions with the use of characters, Dilsey, Caddy and Caddy’s brother Jason. Caddy is a sister whose actions haunt the brother’s even after she left them, Dilsey is a black helper/babysitter of the house, and Jason is the brother

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    The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner, tells the story of the Compson family. The Compson’s are direct descendants of old, southern aristocrats. Largely based upon biblical values, old southern culture has a rigid and deeply ingrained moral code that respectable members abide by. Some of these values include familial honor, the protection of women, men taking on the role of the family’s provider, the maintaining of virginity until marriage, women respecting men, etc. Faulkner uses this family

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    landscape is emphasized through Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko and The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner, as these authors merge two distinct novels into the same time period in which their co-existence should not be possible, but somehow is. As American literature evolves, the limitations that were once set upon authors disappear, ultimately creating an uneven literary landscape as seen through The Sound and the Fury and Ceremony. On one hand, Faulkner’s novel divulges the reality behind the

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    novel, The Sound and the Fury, the decline of southern moral values at the close of the Civil War was a major theme. This idea was portrayed by the debilitation of the Compson family. Each chapter of the novel was a different characters’ interpretation of the decaying Compson family. Benjy, Quentin, and Jason Compson were three members of the Compson family who had their own section in the novel. Their unique ideas contributed to the reader’s understanding of the novel. In his novel, The Sound and the

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