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1、William Faulkner 威廉 福克纳 (1897-1962) William Faulkner ranks with Ernest Hemingway as one of the leading American authors of the Twentieth Century. Faulkner, like Robert Frost, was a regionalist, who spent most of his life in a small, particular area of the United States, writing about the scenes and
2、people he knew best. Faulkner s region was the Deep South, with its bitter history of slavery, civil war and destruction. He invented a county and a town in his imagination very similar to his own part of Mississippi, and he wrote about the society in the South by inventing families which represente
3、d different social forces: the old, decaying upper class; the rising, ambitious, unscrupulous class of “ poor whites ” ; and the Negroes who labored for both of them. Most of his stories take place in this imaginary Yoknapatawpha County, and concern members of the same families at different times in
4、 history. 他的多数故事都发生在他 构想的 Yoknapatawpha 县,他笔下的 人物不是一次写完,同一人物会在几 本书中,在不同历史时期反复出现。 这显然加深了人物的开掘,使其具有 历史的深广度。 His Life. William Faulkner was born in the Deep South, the oldest of four brothers. His father was the business manager for the State University in Oxford, Mississippi, where Faulkner spent most
5、 of his life. His family camefrom the old, white upper class. Though in decline in the 20 th century, the family retained some of the old customs. Falkner was brought up by a black nurse whom he called Mammie Cally, who told him many stories remembered from the time of slavery. Faulkner was an imagi
6、native boy. There was no public library in Oxford, but there were plenty of English classics at home, which he read at random. He disliked school and dropped out after two years of high school. The people of Oxford considered him a wastrel. (a wasteful or worthless person) Two neighbors had a decisi
7、ve influence on him. He fell in love with a young neighbor named Estelle, and, hoping to get married one day, he took a respectable job in a bank. Another neighbor, Philip Stone (菲尔, 斯 多 ) , found young Faulkner unusually intelligent, and took charge of his reading. Stone gave him books which were u
8、nknown in Oxford, Mississippi, including the 19 th Century French symbolist writers who had deeply influenced Ezra Pound and . Eliot. Faulkner taught himself to read French at night, while he worked in the bank by day. In 1918, when Faulkner was 21 years old, Estelle married another man and went to
9、live in Asia. Heartbroken, Faulkner left Mississippi and enlisted in the Canadian Air Force, hoping to fight in the First World War. However, the war ended before he had finished his basic training in Toronto. He went home and restlessly worked at one job after another, writing poems in his spare ti
10、me. He ended up as the postmaster (person in charge of a post office) in his hometown of Oxford. His neighbor Mr. Stone encouraged him to keep writing, and even supplied the moneyto get the poems published. In 1925, he took a job with a newspaper in NewOrleans, the most important city in the South a
11、t that time. He joined a literary circle which centered around Sherwood Anderson, and with Anderson s encouragement he wrote his first novel ( Soldier s Pay 1926), about a wounded air force pilot. Anderson arranged to get the novel published and Faulkner, like nearly every other young American write
12、r in the 1920 s, then made his way to Paris. He was vey lonely there, however, and when he received the first money from the sale of his novel, he bought a ticket home. The novel was not popular, and Faulkner did not make much money from it. Back in Mississippi, he worked once again at many differen
13、t jobs while he wrote a second novel in his spare time. (Mosquitoes, 1927) This novel was a satire about the New Orleans literary circle. Faulkner was a solitary man who wrote in isolation. He criticized talkative, self-important writers who were easily influenced by current fashions in literature.
14、Faulkner wrote fiercely and constantly, giving every poemand story to Mr. Stone, who triedin vain to find publishersfor them. In the 1920 s, vey few people wanted to read the kind of things he was writing. He wrote another novel and when it, too, was rejected, he decided that his work would never be
15、 published again. In a way this realization liberated him. Such a true artist as he, that it only enconcouraged him to write more, exactly as he wanted, unbothered by thoughts of what the public might like. Faulkner rewrote the rejected novel under the title Sartoris (1929) , and at the sametime wro
16、te a new one The Sound and the Fury, his first masterpiece. To his great surprise, both of them were published in 1929, and although vey few copies were bought by the public, reviews by literary critics praised them highly. In the same year, Estelle came back from Asia, having divorced her husband,
17、and she married Faulkner. He bought a deserted, ruined mansion, built before the Civil War, which he began to repair with his own hammer and saw, and settled down to be a fulltime author. From 1930 to 1942, Faulkner was hugely productive. He wrote two collections of short stories, a volume of poetry
18、 and nine novels. 他完成了两部短篇小说集,一本诗 集,还有九部小说。 Even so, he could not earn enough money to live in those Depression years, because his books were difficult to read. The literary critics also turned against him, blaming him for concentrating too narrowly on Southern subjects, and for writing in a complic
19、ated, highly original style. Undeterred, he took a job writing film scripts for Hollywood at a low but steady salary (just as F. Scott Fitzgerald was doing at that time) and continued to write his own books. Faulkner believed that every writer should invent his own style and method, as Hemingwayhad
20、done, and continue to experiment.For instance, in his early book,The Sound and the Fury, he used a technique called “ stream of consciousness ” , in which the whole story was told through the thoughts of one character. Later, he used the same technique but explored its utmost possibilities by puttin
21、g the thoughts into the mind of a lunatic. (a person who is mentally ill) He was willing to take the risk of making mistakes, which he sometimes did, and learning from his mistakes. In 1936, his novel Absalom, Absalom! ( 押 沙 龙 , 押 沙 龙 !) , now considered one of his best, was most scathingly reviewed
22、 (harshly criticized) , and his readers began to fall away. By the early 1940 s, Faulkner was more or less forgotten by the public, although his work was intensely admired by several other American novelists, and his books were greatly appreciated in France, where they had been very well translated.
23、 During his great productive period of the 1930 s, Faulkner began writing about an imaginary place in the Deep South called Yoknapatawpha County (约克那帕 特法县) , with its main town which closely resembled Oxford, Mississippi. He invented its geography, its history and its people so precisely that it see
24、med like a real place to his readers and to himself. Faulkner did not lay out a plan for his cycle (series) of Yoknapatawpha books, as John Galsworthy in England and Emile Zola in France had planned theirs. Instead,Faulkner s legend simply grew, book by book. Family sagas (long stories) developed in
25、side the larger cycle through several books, covering the history of two principal families in Yokanpatawpha County. Onewas the Sartoris family , which had belonged to the ruling class of slave-owners before the civil war, but which deteriorated in the 20th century because it could not adapt to new
26、conditions. As the old leadership died out, power was seized by a new class of poor-white up-starts, symbolized by the unscrupulous Snopes family They were scorned and feared by the effete ( 衰老的 ) Sartoris clan. Other stories about life, past and present, in Yoknapatawpha County filled out this extr
27、aordinarily diverse, imaginative body of work. Faulkner started a second rise to fame, higher than the first, in 1945, when, at the insistence of other writers, a New York publishinghouse issued The PortableFaulkner , which presentedthe Yoknapatawpha stories in historical order. Many novelists took
28、the opportunity to write explanatory essays and the public began to read Faulkner again. His books were studied with great care by scholars and academic critics, and an ever-growing stream of essays and dissertations on Faulkner s work began to pour out of American universities. His next novel, Intr
29、uder In The Dust (1948), was a success and so was his next collection of short stories. In 1950, he received both America s highest literary award and the Nobel Prize for Literature. Against his private, solitary nature, Faulkner became a well-known public figure. He was sent abroad by the State Dep
30、artment to give lectures in South America, Europe and Japan. In his last period of writing, in the late1950 s,Faulkner completed his cycle of stories about Yoknapatawpha County. The county became a pleasanter place in his imagination, and he expressed a more tolerant view of human nature, even chang
31、ing his opinion about some of the characters whohad appeared in his earlier books “ Because” he said, “ I know them better now.” his last book, The Rievers (1962) was a comedy about boyhood. It was published and widely acclaimed only a month before his death in Oxford, Mississippi. Faulkner died jus
32、t one year after Hemingway, and so passed away America stwo most remarkable modern writers. His Style. Faulkner used a remarkable range of techniques, themes and tones in his fiction. His stylistic innovations were often adapted from the experiments of other modern writers, which he then used in his
33、 own way. His books are sometimes difficult to read, and need close study by the reader. His works are distinguished by complex plots, sometimes extending over several novels in which the same characters appear. The hero of one story may appear as a minor character in another. He successfully advanc
34、ed two modern literary techniques: stream-of-consciousness,and multiple point of view. Stream-of-consciousness, first used by James Joyce, the Irish novelist, in 1922, tells a story by recording the thoughts of one character. Action and plot are less important than the reactions and inner musings (w
35、hat is said to oneself in a thoughtful manner) of the narrator. Time sequences are often dislocated (disrupted). The reader feels himself to be a participant in the story, rather than an observer, and a high degree of emotion can be achieved by this technique. Faulkner became a master at presenting
36、multiple points of view, showing within the same story how the characters reacted differently to the same person or the same situation. The use of this technique gives the story a circular form- wherein one event is the center, with various points of view radiating from it - rather than a linear str
37、ucture, with one event following another by cause and effect, in a logical progressional time. The multiple point of view technique makes the reader recognize the difficulty of arriving at a true judgment. Faulkner s frequent themes were history and race.He sought to explain the present time by exam
38、ining the past, particularly by telling the story of several generations of one family as history altered their lives. He was deeply interested in the relationship between blacks and whites in the South, where both races exist side by side in almost equal numbers. He was especially concerned about t
39、he social problems of people who were of mixed race, unacceptable to either blacks or whites. His Point of View Faulkner generally shows a grim picture ofhuman society, where violenceand cruelty are frequently included. His later books showed more optimism, and his last book was a comedy. His intention was to show the evil, harsh events in contrast to such eternal virtues as love, honor, pity, compassion and self-sacrifice, and thereby exposed the faults of society. He felt that it was an artist sduty to remind
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