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Early Life

Early Life. William Cuthbert Falkner (he added the u later) Born in New Albany, Mississippi on Sept. 25, 1897 to Murry and Maud. Around age 5, his family moved to Oxford, MS. At age 13, he began writing poetry Dropped out of high school to work at a bank. Military.

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Early Life

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  1. Early Life • William Cuthbert Falkner (he added the u later) • Born in New Albany, Mississippi on Sept. 25, 1897 to Murry and Maud

  2. Around age 5, his family moved to Oxford, MS. • At age 13, he began writing poetry • Dropped out of high school to work at a bank

  3. Military • Rejected from US Army because he was too short (5’5’’) • Joined the Royal Air Force in Canada • WWI ended before he finished training • Lied about wartime military service- he told people that he received injuries that left him in constant pain and with a silver plate in his head. • He used his brief service in the RAF in his written fiction, particularly in his first published novel, Soldiers’ Pay, in 1926.

  4. After WWI… • 1919-enrolled at University of Mississippi • Published several poems • Dropped out in 1920 • He also served as a scoutmaster for the Oxford Boy Scout troop, but he was asked to resign for “moral reasons” (probably drinking).

  5. Paris! • In 1925 he went to Paris from August until December • Went to the same café as James Joyce but was always too shy to speak to him • He described himself as a “failed poet”

  6. Continued writing to get published from 1926 to 1929 • Failed novels: • Soldier’s Pay (1926)…lost generation, WWI • Mosquitoes (1927)… “worst novel”, New Orleans • Sartoris(1929)…First novel set in Yoknapatawpha(Yawknaw-puh-toff-uh) County • “To understand the world, you must first understand a place like Mississippi.” • Believed his career as an author was over…so he began to write strictly for pleasure

  7. The Sound and the Fury1929 • After several attempts to write for publication, he decided to write a novel for pleasure • Revolutionary novel-form, characters, etc.

  8. Estelle • Estelle Oldham divorced her first husband in April of 1929 and married Faulkner in June • Faulkner’s childhood sweetheart Rowan Oak • Bought in 1930 • Decrepit antebellum house in Oxford • Place of comfort for Faulkner for the rest of his life

  9. As I Lay Dying1930 • Faulkner said it was a “tour de force” and he wrote it “in six weeks, without changing a word” • Lower-class farmers from Yoknapatawpha County • Bundren Family, 15 different speakers • “A twisted tail of prostitutes, lawyers, families, lusts, and betrayal” –reviewer • Rape-shocked readers • Best selling novel until 1939 Sanctuary 1931

  10. Alabama and Light in August • 1931- Estelle gave birth to a girl named Alabama…she died within a few days • Shortly after her death, Faulkner began writing a novel called Dark House about a man named Joe Christmas. • Faulkner’s first real exploration of race…history and how it influences us now • This novel was published as Light in August in 1932.

  11. Pylon and Absalom, Absalom! • Pylon-not set in Y. County, takes place at an air show (a few months later, Faulkner’s brother Dean is killed in the airplane William bought) • Absalom, Absalom!-tells the story of the Sutpen family…ties in Quentin Compson

  12. He became a screenwriter in Hollywood for extra money-To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep, and The Southerner were his biggest screenplay adaptations • He published several more novelsbefore his death • Estelle gave birth to Faulkner’s only surviving child, Jill, in 1933.

  13. Faulkner and Hemingway • Faulkner on Hemingway: “he has no courage, has never climbed out on a limb ... has never used a word where the reader might check his usage by a dictionary” Faulkner and Women • Faulkner had several affairs while he was married to Estelle Faulkner and Booze • He would stay at a sanatorium after his drinking binges…he wasn’t really an alcoholic…he planned when he would have his binges (usually when he finished writing a book)

  14. Nobel Prize for Literature • 1949 • Famous acceptance speech

  15. I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. The poet's, the writer's, duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor and hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. The poet's voice need not merely be the record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail.

  16. Faulkner at UVA… First writer in residence at UVA He liked Virginia because… “Virginians are all snobs and I like snobs.”

  17. According to legend, after Faulkner outlined the seven-day plot of his Pulitzer Prize winner, A Fable, on the walls of his home (he kept a bed in his office), his wife demanded the text be painted over. Outraged, Faulkner rewrote it and shellacked the wall, where the writing remains today. • Pulitzer Prize

  18. Oprah likes Faulkner

  19. Disturbing… • Somebody in the world has a tattoo of William Faulkner

  20. Songs

  21. Had a heart attack at age 64 • Died July 6th, 1962 • Buried in Oxford, Mississippi

  22. WFotW: http://www.mcsr.olemiss.edu/~egjbp/faulkner/faulkner.html • http://www.biblio.com/author_biographies/2024262/William_Faulkner.html

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