1 / 29

“A Rose for Emily”

“A Rose for Emily”. Notes on the story. General Information: Narrator. The voice of the town (Jefferson, MS) tells readers the story. . General Information: Emily’s House. Emily = house (Note the many similarities between Emily & her house).

cain
Télécharger la présentation

“A Rose for Emily”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “A Rose for Emily” Notes on the story

  2. General Information: Narrator • The voice of the town (Jefferson, MS) tells readers the story.

  3. General Information: Emily’s House • Emily = house (Note the many similarities between Emily & her house). • As the crumbling Grierson house is being described, think about how the town views Emily herself as a fallen monument.

  4. General Information: Plot • Plot is non-chronological • Non-linear plot encourages growing pity for Emily • The non-linear plot also serves to hide Emily’s crimes (just as the town does) by discouraging attention to any single event

  5. General Information: Foreshadowing • Foreshadowing = smell, lime, poison, father’s body • Readers know all along that something (someone) is rotten (dead), yet the ending still has an element of shock.

  6. General Information: Ending • End of story has 2 surprises: #1: Homer is there, and #2: Emily slept with him

  7. Making sense of the events • Chronology of Events • Emily’s father dies • Col. Sartoris pays Emily’s taxes • Col. Sartoris dies • Homer arrives • Emily buys arsenic • Homer disappears • Smell appears • Aldermen try to collect taxes • Emily dies

  8. Portraits of Emily: Descriptions of Emily framed in a portrait, window, or doorway

  9. Portraits of Emily: Section I • Crayon portrait with her father – tarnished gilt easel

  10. Portraits of Emily: Section II: • Small fat woman in black framed by doorway; she looks dead (something inside her has died) • Miss Emily sits in window (watching sprinkling of lime)

  11. Portraits of Emily: Section III • Angel in window (short hair)

  12. Portraits of Emily: Section IV • Emily is seen in upstairs/downstairs windows

  13. Descriptions of Emily How Emily is presented in the story: Growing sympathy makes ending more disturbing; romantic view prevents town from seeing reality; they cover her crimes.

  14. Descriptions of Emily • Tradition, duty, care • Fallen monument • Hereditary obligation on the town • Would not accept charity • Emily in denial about father’s death

  15. Descriptions of Emily • Small fat woman in black • Bloated, like a body long submerged in motionless water; pallid hue • Eyes like coal pressed in dough; fatty ridges • An idol

  16. Descriptions of Emily • Hair cut short, like a girl • Angelic comparison • Carried head high with Homer • Thin, cold, haughty black eyes; lighthouse keeper

  17. Descriptions of Emily • Fat with iron gray hair; like the hair of an active man • Dead on a heavy walnut bed

  18. Conflicts in the story Character conflicts that drive the plot

  19. Conflicts • Emily vs. Homer • Emily is southern aristocracy, desperate for marriage • Homer is Yankee, day laborer, not marrying kind • Resolution = she kills him and keeps his body

  20. Conflicts • Emily vs. her Father • Keeps her single – chases her suitors • Possible Incest and possible insanity • Resolution = he dies, leaving her alone

  21. Conflicts • Emily vs. Town • Taxes • What is acceptable (smell, Homer) • Gossip • Is there resolution?

  22. Conflicts • Emily vs. Herself • Maintain status or marry • Takes a lover vs. religion and tradition • Murders what she loves • “Loving” Homer after death was her atonement

  23. Old Southern Setting • What makes this uniquely southern? • Influence of traditions • Negro servant • Role of clergy/relatives/women • Class considerations • Gothic elements: Old house, mysterious activities, smell, strange servant, closed rooms, dust, darkness, decay…

  24. Symbolic elements • Rose – love; gift of love; delicate; sweet smelling • Iron – strong, firm, cold, inflexible • Dust – overlooked, neglected, dirty, return to dust, antique • Barron – barren • Rat/snake – Homer is both • Black – death/funeral (psychologically dead) • Closed house/rooms – closed mind; isolation

  25. Vocabulary • cupolas: dome on a house, often serving as a belfry • august: majestic; inspiring admiration • coquettish: to act like a flirtatious woman • motes: particles or specks of dust or dirt • crayon: Pastels, (not crayola) • pallid: pale, drained of color

  26. Vocabulary • vanquish: to conquer or subdue • temerity: reckless boldness • diffident: lacking self confidence; timid; shy • deprecation: disapproval of • tableau: striking picture or scene • spraddled: to straddle or sprawl

  27. Vocabulary • vindicated: cleared from accusation; liberate; defend • imperviousness: impenetrable; incapable of being impaired, injured, or influenced • cabal: a small group of plotters, or their plot; subversives • bier: frame or stand for a coffin • jalousies: blind or window with horizontal slats

  28. Vocabulary • sibilant: hissing • macabre: gruesome; grim; ghastly • acrid: sharp or biting in taste or smell • cuckholded: cuckhold=husband of an unfaithful wife

  29. “…the man himself lay on the bed.” End of presentation

More Related