Description
This study regards Faulkner's decision to place a disabled character at the center of perception as the inaugural and emblematic gesture of his writing. Closely examining excerpts from Faulkner's novels and a few short stories, Spill emphasizes how the corporal, temporal, sensorial, and narrative figures of "idiocy" are reflected throughout Faulkner's work. These writing choices underlie some of his most compelling inventions and certainly contribute to his unmistakable writing style. In the process, Faulkner's writing takes on a phenomenological dimension, simultaneously dismantling and reinventing the intertwined dynamics of perception and language.
About the Author
Frederique Spill is professor of American literature at University of Picardy-Jules Verne in Amiens, France. She contributed to Critical Insights: "The Sound and the Fury" and Faulkner at Fifty: Tutors and Tyros. She coedited The Wagon Moves: New Essays on "As I Lay Dying" as well as the spring 2018 issue of the Faulkner Journal. She is part of the editorial board of the Faulkner Journal. She is author of The Radiance of Small Things in Ron Rash's Writing. She also coedited, with Randall Wilhelm, a special issue of the Journal of the Short Stories in English devoted to Ron Rash's short fiction. She has also published articles in French and in English on varied contemporary American authors.
Reviews
With great authority and lucidity, Inventing Benjy shows brilliantly how Faulkner adopted the conceit of 'idiocy' for his innovative, contrarian, and revolutionary modernist project." - John T. Matthews, editor of William Faulkner in Context
Book Information
ISBN 9781496849007
Author Frederique Spill
Format Hardback
Page Count 277
Imprint University Press of Mississippi
Publisher University Press of Mississippi