Browsing by Subject "Faulkner, William, 1897-1962 -- Criticism and interpretation"
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Item A computerized stylistic analysis of William Faulkner's the Sound the Fury(Texas Tech University, 1990-12) Blythe, Jo AnnNot availableItem Faulkner's use of myth in three novels: a critique of the criticism(Texas Tech University, 1969-08) Lanceley, Jana Kay CrownoverNot availableItem Folklore in William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha fiction(Texas Tech University, 1961-08) Everett, Maxine StoneNot availableItem Land, family, and memory: a comparative approach to Go Down Moses and El Llano en Llamas [The Burning Plain](Texas Tech University, 2004-05) Mendoza-Serrano, CarolinaNot availableItem Man against nature: Moby Dick and "The bear"(Texas Tech University, 1971-08) Hughes, Charles WNot availableItem Obsessed heroes in the novels of William Faulkner(Texas Tech University, 1967-05) Neeb, Bob FNot availableItem Sibling Incest: A Theme in Selected Novels of William Faulkner(Texas Tech University, 1973-08) Kelley, Nancy Ann HenryNot Available.Item The chase motif in the novels of William Faulkner.(Texas Tech University, 1975-08) Addicks, Barbara DeloresNot availableItem The dragon's black breath: evil and moral vision in the new Gothic novel(Texas Tech University, 1971-08) Armitage, Shelley SNot availableItem The evolution of patterns of characterization from Faulkner's Soldiers' pay (1926) through Absalom, Absalom! (1936)(Texas Tech University, 1976-05) Smith, Stella PNot availableItem The problem of humanity in Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha stories(Texas Tech University, 1961-05) Springer, Cecil LeeNot availableItem The Scapegoat in Selected Works of William Faulkner(Texas Tech University, 1976-05) Hardt, John StephenNot Available.Item The time signature: nomad thought in Faulknerian time(Texas Tech University, 1999-05) Stayton, Jeffrey H.It is the intention of this introduction to map out the ideas central to my argument—that the Civil War is a time signature for Faulkner's Yoknapawtapha narratives. It is therefore necessary to explain my theory of time signatures in detail, and how it was arrived at. It draws from different theorists of time, but it is Faulkner's own prose and ruminations on time which best express it. This introduction will also briefly look at Nietzsche's eternal return and Deleuze and Guattari's concepts of the refrain and Nomadology. This introduction, lastly, will outline the rhetorical strategy of the subsequent chapters.