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A Rose for Emily

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Title: A Rose for Emily


1
A Rose for Emily
  • William Faulkner

2
About the author
3
William Faulkner life
  • William Faulkner(1897-1962)was born in New
    Albany,Mississippi. He attended the University of
    Mississippi in Oxford before and after his
    service in the Royal Canadian Air Force in World
    I. His literary career began in New Orleans where
    he met Sherwood Anderson, who helped him get his
    first novel Soldiers Pay published in 1926. The
    work which won Faulkner a Nobel Prize in 1950 is
    often a depiction of life in his fictional
    Yoknapatawpha County, an imaginative
    reconstruction of the area adjacent to Oxford.

4
A Picture of Yoknapatawpha County( a little
postage stamp of native soil)
5
His Main Writings
  • His major novels
  • The Sound and the Fury(1929)
  • As I Lay Dying(1930)
  • Sanctuary(1931)
  • Light in August(1932)
  • Absalom , Absalom !(1936)
  • The Hamlet(1940)
  • His books of short stories
  • These Thirteen (1931)
  • Go down, Moses(1942)
  • The Collected Stories of William Fanlkner(1950)

6
Faulkner A country folk writer
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7
William Faulkner American Writer1897-1962
  • The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949
  • "for his powerful and artistically unique
    contribution to the modern American novel"

8
About the text
  • A Rose for Emily is one of Faulkners most
    widely read in the American classroom.
  • Chinese students may find it difficult to
    understand and appreciate. Some of them may think
    it is a bizarre story about an old eccentric lady
    in an American Southern town. It is true that the
    setting of the story is the American South. Yet,
    the theme of the story is universal, transcending
    the boundaries of time and space. Like many other
    works of great literature, this short story tells
    about love, death, honor, pride, change, and loss.

9
  • The story is set in the southern town of
    Jefferson in Yoknapatawpha Country which is also
    the setting for a dozen of his novels.
  • Emily Grierson, the protagonist, has been twisted
    in personality by forces beyond her control.
    Dominated by her aristocratic father, she has
    been prevented from marrying and after his death
    she is left alone and penniless. She kills her
    lover Homer Barron in order to keep him with her.
    She does not accept change of the time and
    alienates herself from the community. She is
    insane and her actions grotesque, but she is a
    victim, a tragic woman who invites sympathy. One
    of the themes of this story is the relation of
    the individual and his actions to the past,
    present and future. Apart from the exploration of
    psychological reality, the displaced chronology
    in narration is also characteristic of Faulkners
    style.

10
The Meaning of the Title
  • The meaning of the title is ambiguous, capable
    of various interpretations. A rose is a cliché,
    symbolizing love and a pledge of faithfulness.
    From the story we can see Miss Emily was denied
    love. So, in this sense, the title has an ironic
    meaning. A rose for somebody can also mean a kind
    of memorial, an offering, in memory of somebody.
    Then, who offered a rose for Emily?

11
Writing style
  • Flashback and foreshadowing are two often used
    literary devices that utilize time in order to
    produce a desired effect. Flashbacks are used to
    present action that occurs before the beginning
    of a story foreshadowing creates expectation for
    action that has not yet happened. Faulkner uses
    both devices in A Rose for Emily.

12
Detailed Study of the Text
  • Part I
  • The street used to house only the best families.
    Then great changes took place garages and cotton
    gins were established on the street and their
    existence wiped out the aristocratic traces in
    that neighborhood. While the whole street was
    becoming modern and commercial, only Miss Emilys
    house remained the same. Although her house was
    decaying, it still assumed an air of a stubborn
    and frivolous girl. The cotton wagons and
    gasoline pumps were ugly enough, but this house,
    which was old, in decay, pretentious, and
    completely out of place, was more unpleasant to
    look at. This detail shows that the house and its
    owner share the same character.
  • Miss Emily had lived long and had become a
    tradition because she represented the aristocracy
    of the Old South that had lost out in the Civil
    War. She was a care because she was old,
    unmarried, and without family, and the people in
    the town felt they must take care of her. They
    felt that taking care of her was their duty and
    obligation. This obligation passed from
    generation to generation as long as she lived.

13
  • 3. Miss Emily would not have accepted charity.
    Not that is used to say what follows is not
    true. Charity would be humiliating to Miss Emily.
    When her father died, Miss Emily was quite poor,
    but being a proud woman from an august family,
    she would not accept charity. Colonel Sartoris,
    born into another aristocratic family in
    Jefferson, had elaborate ideas about how white
    upper class women should be treated. With the
    decline of the South after the war, these rich
    white families also declined. He knew that the
    wives and daughters of the declining plantation
    owners enjoyed very high but also outdated
    status. They should be looked up to, respected
    and taken care of. He knew exactly what Miss
    Emily needed and how she felt now, and thus
    invented a tale to justify the edict so that he
    could give her some financial aid without
    appearing charitable.
  • 4. fat, obese, plump, overweight, large, heavy,
    chubby, stout, tubby
  • If you want to be polite, dont say that
    people are fat. Overweight or just large, in
    American English heavy, would be more polite.
    Plump is most often used of women and children
    and means slightly or pleasantly fat. Chubby is
    most often used of babies and children and also
    means pleasantly fat and healthy looking. Stout
    means slightly fat and tubby means short and fat.
    If someone is extremely fat and unhealthy, he/she
    is obese. Obese is also the word used by doctors.

14
Part II
  • 1. The ladies didnt believe that a man, any
    man, could keep a kitchen properly. When the
    terrible smell developed, they thought it was
    because the manservant didnt keep the kitchen
    clean.
  • 2. The Griersons regarded themselves as very
    important and the outside world as vulgar full of
    people inferior to them. They belonged to tow
    entirely different worlds. After her father died,
    Miss Emily shut herself up in the house,
    retreating to her world of the past. However, the
    complaints about the smell served as a link
    between the two different worlds and compelled
    her to deal with the other world.
  • 3. The next day the mayor received two more
    complaints. One of them was from a man who came
    and pleaded to the mayor in a shy and timid way.

15
  • 4.Miss Emily sat in the
  • window with the light behind
  • her. What people Could see
  • was her silhouette, a dark
  • figure seen against a light
  • Background. In this image
  • She didnt look like a living
  • person but an idol, or a
  • Goddess. Such a image suited
  • her rigid and stubborn personality,
  • her arrogant character.

16
  • 4. People in the town felt that the Grierson
    family regarded themselves more important than
    they really deserved to be. The fact that Miss
    Emilys great-aunt. Old lady Wyatt, had gone
    crazy had to do with this blind, excessive
    self-importance.
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    ????????,?????,??????,????????????????????
  • This sentence depicts a central image that
    tells several things about the relationship
    between father and daughter in Grierson family.
    First, the positions of the father and daughter
    are meaningful. The father was standing in the
    foreground while Miss Emily was standing in the
    background. This shows the fathers dominant
    position and the daughters subordinate role. The
    fathers spraddling adds to his image as a stern
    patriarchal figure. Second, the father turned his
    back to her, showing that he refused to listen to
    her, denying her wishes. Then Mr. Grierson was
    clutching a horsewhip, which was clearly a symbol
    of power, authority, and strict control. Miss
    Emilys slender figure suggests vulnerability,
    and her white dress symbolizes purity, the most
    valued quality of the Southern white women. The
    fact that the two of them were framed by the
    back-flung front door may be interpreted in
    different ways. One interpretation is that the
    father was blocking the door, suggesting Miss
    Emily was unable to walk out of the house and
    choosing her suitor freely. Another
    interpretation is that the door was open for
    suitors but the suitors were driven away by the
    father holding a horsewhip.

17
  • 6. When she got to be thirty and was still
    single, people in the town were not happy about
    such a outcome, but it did confirm their
    predictionsMiss Emily was still single because
    the Griersons held themselves too high for what
    they really were, and all the young men who had
    come to court Miss Emily had been driven away by
    the father. They knew that even though there was
    insanity in the family, Miss Emily wouldnt have
    turned down all of her chances if they had really
    existed.
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    ?????,???????????,??????????
  • 7. Without her fathers over-protection and
    without much money, she had become a common
    person like the other townspeople. Ordinary
    people often become excited or worried when they
    get a penny more or a penny less. Being poor, now
    Miss Emily would learn to appreciate the value of
    money like other people in the town.
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    ?

18
Part III
  • It is obvious that there is something else
    beneath the change of appearances. What is it? It
    is quite ambiguous. The images in this passage
    may be interpreted as a woman stripped of her
    sexuality. In this portrait, Emily assumes the
    semblance of a girl instead of a sexually mature
    woman of thirty. Her cut hair is especially
    important. Since ancient times, a womans hair
    has symbolized her sexuality. Emilys hair, along
    with her sexuality, has been cut short through
    her fathers pride. The cut hair also introduces
    religious imagery, for an initiate into nunnery
    shears her hair as a symbol of her chastity. In
    addition, the adjectives tragic and serene
    envisage a Madonna, a holy virgin, as an
    addendum to the primary image of angels who,
    although often depicted as women, are asexual.
    The images can also indicate that with her hair
    cut short, Emily was now a liberated woman. She
    was determined to change her role as an
    upper-class genteel woman. A short hair usually
    makes a woman look stronger and more independent
    in character. This quality of hers can be seen in
    her courting with Homer Barron, a Yankee foreman,
    despite traditional social prejudice.
  • Yankee Homer Barron was one of those from the
    victorious North who, after the Civil War, came
    to South in the hope of making money. They were
    often called carpetbaggers, and were objects of
    scorn or suspicion for most Southerners.

19
  • 3. But there were still others, older people, who
    said that no matter how sad Miss Emily was over
    her fathers death, she should not forget she had
    certain obligations as a member of the nobility,
    though a real lady would not describe her
    self-restraint by the expression noblesse oblige.
    The implied meaning is that it should be
    unthinkable for Emily as part of the local
    nobility to consider marrying a man so far
    beneath her.

20
Part IV
  • 1. He would never disclose what happened
    during his talk with Miss Emily. We can infer
    that Miss Emily must have treated him with
    distain when he came to express the communitys
    disapproval of her public courting activities
    with Homer Barron. This is why he refused to have
    another talk with Miss Emily.
  • 2. The townspeople were glad because they had
    been annoyed by the arrogant attitude of Miss
    Emily and now the two cousins were even more
    stubborn and self-important than Miss Emily. They
    believed that the two cousins would succeed in
    persuading Miss Emily and Homer Barron to get
    married quickly so that her public courting with
    Homer Barron would come to an end.
  • 3. The people in the town guessed that their
    relationship had turned sour and so Homer Barron
    had left. And they expected to see a quarrel
    between them. When nothing of the kind happened,
    they were a little disappointed. Then they began
    to think that he perhaps had gone to prepare for
    the wedding.
  • blowing-off a loud quarrel that signals
    the end of something

21
  • 4. By that time, the cousins had completed their
    mission and should leave Jefferson. Now the
    townspeople were taking the side of Miss Emily
    and made secret plans to help her deal with her
    cousins in a clear way.
  • 5. Her father had driven away her suitors so many
    times, thus preventing her prom getting what she
    wanted as a woman.
  • thwart to prevent someone from doing what they
    are trying to do
  • 6. What is the symbolic meaning of her vigorous
    iron-grey hair?
  • It symbolizes her strong and stubborn
    personality. She refused to make any change to
    adapt her herself to the changing society. Even
    her hair ceased turning its color.

22
  • 7. Now Miss Emily no longer went out.
  • From time to time the townspeople would
  • see her in one of the downstairs windows.
  • She had evidently shut the top floor of the
  • house. Sitting in the window, Miss Emily
  • looked like the carved torso of an idol for
  • worship placed in a niche. Whether she
  • was looking at us or not we could not tell
  • and it was not important because she had
  • ceased to be a real human being, but
  • had completely become a sort of monument,
  • symbol of a tradition and hereditary
  • obligation.
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  • ??????????????

23
niche
24
  • 8. The author uses five adjectives to describe
    how the townspeople felt about Miss Emily. These
    words reflect the townspeoples ambivalent
    attitude toward Miss Emily. She was dear because
    she represented the Southern heritage to a
    certain extent. She was inescapable because she
    was a sort of hereditary obligation upon the
    town. She was impervious and not affected by any
    changes taking place in the town, and her
    imperviousness was well reflected by her ignoring
    the tax notice and her refusal to pay taxes. She
    was tranquil. Though she was tragic, she remained
    calm and free from disturbance. Her tranquility
    as well as her rigidity was portrayed by her
    motionless silhouette in the window. She was
    certainly perverse, always behaving in an
    unreasonable way and regularly doing the opposite
    of what people expected her to do.
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25
Part V
  • 1. The very old men, who were even older than
    Miss Emily, came to the funeral. Some of them
    were veterans of the Civil War, and they had put
    on their old Confederate uniforms to pay their
    last respect this Southern lady from an
    aristocratic family. Standing on the porch and
    the lawn, they talked of Miss Emily, mistakenly
    thinking of her as someone of their age, born
    around 1840 or so whereas she (born around 1855)
    was much younger than they were. They imagined
    they had danced with her and courted her perhaps.
    As the old people often do, they confused the
    dates and years of past happenings. To the old
    people, all the past should be like a road that
    becomes smaller as it reaches further back. But
    to those old southerners, the recent past of ten
    years or so was like a bottleneck, a narrow
    passage, or a tunnel. Beyond that narrow passage,
    the remote past became a huge level meadow where
    things were pleasantly and fondly mixed up
    together. Like the green grass on the meadow
    never touched by the winter, their memories of
    the remote past remained blurred, sweet,
    romanticized, and unchanged.
  • a. mathematical progression sequence or
    succession of happenings in time marked by
    numbers
  • b. bottleneck any place, as a narrow road,
    where traffic is slowed up or halted any point
    at which movement or progress is slowed up.

26
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    ??????????????????????????????,???????????????
    ?,??????????,??????????,???????,??????????????????
    ??????????????????,???????????????,???????????????
    ????,?????????????,??????????

27
  • 2. Just before his death, the man was lying in a
    position of an embrace. But death that always
    lasts longer than love and conquers even the pain
    and suffering of love had turned him into a man
    whose wife proved unfaithful.
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    ??,?????????????????????????,???????????,?????????
    ????????,????????????????????

28
Why did Miss Emily kill Homer Barron?
  • Barron had deserted her.
  • Barron refused to marry her.
  • She feared that Barron would not remain faithful
    to her after their marriage.
  • She was insane.
  • He wanted to blackmail her.
  • He wanted to take her to the North.

29
What kind of a woman is Miss Emily? How is she
portrayed in the story?
  • Born into an aristocratic family of the
    South, Miss Emily was proud, self-important and
    obstinate like other Griersons. As a lady from
    such a family, she enjoyed a high but obsolete
    social status. On the one hand she was placed on
    a pedestal for people to admire as if she were
    perfect. She was closely watched by the community
    and was always expected to bring honor to the
    town and set a good example for the young. She
    was viewed as a representative of the Southern
    tradition, an idol in the niche. Nominated by
    her father, she was deprived of all opportunities
    for a happy marriage and thus for a normal
    womans life. After she began to court with Homer
    Barron, a Northern laborer, she was accused of
    being a disgrace to the town and a bad example to
    the young people. The patriarchal and social
    pressure warped her character. She tried hard to
    cling to the past, which meant privilege and
    glory to her. She cut herself off from the
    changing world and lived in complete
    self-isolation. Over the years, she was
    transformed from a subordinate young lady
    controlled by her domineering father to a
    middle-aged woman courting a laborer against the
    accusation of the community and then to a
    murderer who not only killed her love but also
    kept the corpse in her house and even sometimes
    lay down beside the remains of the dead body.

30
How did the townspeople think of her?
  • For such a woman, the townspeople had
    mixed feelings----she was dear, inescapable,
    impervious, tranquil, and perverse. For better
    or worse, she is the embodiment of the social
    conditions at that time. Through telling this
    story and exploring the character of Miss Emily,
    Faulkner reveals his ambivalent relationship to
    the South, of which he felt proud and ashamed at
    the same time.

31
The meaning of the story
  • The plot of the story evolves around many
    conflicts the conflicts between Mr. Grierson and
    his daughter, the conflict between Miss Emily and
    Homer Barron, the conflict between Miss Emily and
    the community, the conflict between the South and
    the North, the conflict between Miss Emily and
    the established codes of conduct, and the
    conflict between the past and the present. The
    readers different focus on these conflicts may
    lead to different interpretations. On the whole,
    it tells what it is like to live in the American
    South between the 1860s and the 1930s when the
    South had to digest the loss of the war and cope
    with its legacy in a changing society.

32
Questions
  • 1. How old was Emily when her father died?
  • 2. At what age did Emily teach Chinese painting?
  • 3. Why did Emily refuse to pay the tax?
  • 4. Why does the narrator use the pronoun we?
  • 5. What does this story tell you about the
    culture and mores of the American South during
    that period? How does it compare with your own
    conception of small town life?

33
Which of the photos below best represents the
image of Emily Grierson's house before it became
"an eyesore among eyesores"?
  • A. B.
  • C. D.
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