Title: A Rose for Emily (1930)
1A Rose for Emily (1930)
- Emily seen from different perspectives
- -- Emily on Trial
- Emily Empathized
2Outline
- Your Q A
- A quick summary of online lecture
- Emily Seen from various perspectives
- Emily on Trial
- Your decision EmilyGuilty or not?
- Emily Empathized
3Your QA Tobe and Other Men
- Tobe and Racial Discrimination
- Q Three people tended to avoid seeing Miss Emil
y again. They were the druggist, the Baptist minis
ter and her servant Tobe respectively. Why did the
y act like this?
4Tobe
- Frequent sign Tobe --going in and out with the
market basket - Smell -- Just as if a manany mancould keep a
kitchen properly, the ladies said so they were
not surprised when the smell developed. It was
another link between the gross, teeming world and
the high and mighty Griersons. - Daily, monthly, yearly we watched the Negro grow
grayer and more stooped, - He talked to no one, probably not even to her,
for his voice had grown harsh and rusty, as if
from disuse.
5Your QA Rose
- Roses are usually seen as a symbol of love.
Moreover, the thorns of the rose represent
Emily. Since her father always obstructed all the
young men who wanted to get closing to her, she
might have difficulty getting along with her
lover which makes her be like the thorns. - The rose is often thought of as a symbol for love
which I think in the story it indicates Homer.
Homer is the "rose" for Emily. Emily's father
thought no man was good enough for her, so she
never actually experience the passion of love
until she met Homer. Homer is her "rose" whom she
wished to cherish and kept to herself even after
his body corrupted.
6Your QA Emily
- Emilys house necrophilia, whether she loves
HB, - the strand of hair ( it symbolizes Emily)?
- What is symbolic of Emily? The house, the room
- Images put together to be symbolic of Emilys
personalities iron gray hair, gold chain, ebony
cane, black-coal eyes,
7Your QA Narrator
- The narrators use of we objective?
- Repetition of "Poor Emily they just want to gl
oat over her family, which is in straitened circum
stances. --Yes, but more than this.
8A Rose for Emily Online Lecture
- Setting
- Plot Gaps and Suspense (the ending as an
example) - Different Images of Emily
- The Narrators contradictory views
- of the present
- of the previous generations -- gossips and
intervention
9Setting Emilys House and the Historical
Background
10Setting Emilys House and its Background
11Setting (1) The Grierson House
- Emilys funeral people havent been inside her
house for 10 years - (par 2) It was a big, squarish frame house that
had once been white, decorated with cupolas and
spires and scrolled balconies in the heavily
lightsome style of the seventies, set on what had
once been our most select street. But garages and
cotton gins had encroached and obliterated even
the august names of that neighborhood only Miss
Emily's house was left, lifting its stubborn and
coquettish (??) decay above the cotton wagons and
the gasoline pumpsan eyesore among eyesores. And
now Miss Emily had gone to join the
representatives of those august names where they
lay in the cedar-bemused cemetery among the
ranked and anonymous graves of Union and
Confederate soldiers who fell at the battle of
Jefferson
12Setting (2) Historical Changes
- Time 1862(?) ? 1936
- From Old South to New Souththe Civil War
Industrialism - Clues in the text
- 1894 tax remittance no Negro woman should
appear on the streets without an apron Death of
the Father tax exempted - 1896 Homer Barron from the North
- 1897/1898 the smell
- More changes painting lessons stop tax postal
service - 1936 -- Emily, dead
13Plot (back and forth) GAPS
Story
Plot Story
Sec 1 Present Emilys Death 1. Emily a lady guarded by her father
The tax episode (2nd Generation) (tax remitted in1894 by Colonel Sartoris) 2. 1894 The fathers death, which Emily denies
Sec 2 ? (vanquished the town people) 30 years before, the smell episode The fathers death 3. Emily changed, goes out with HB (1 year later 2 years after her fathers death )
Sec 3 Homer Baron episode Emily, a changed person with H. Barron ?(wants touch of earthiness) Poison 4. The two cousins intervention // poison HB returns, no longer seen
Sec 4 Homer Baron episode Relatives intervention ? Time passes (30 yrs), she grows fatter and older teaches china-painting at age 40? Emily, isolated, turns down the postal service ? death ? 6 months out of sight ? grey fat 5. Smell ? Emily retreats from public life ? no mail box 30 years later
Sec 5 Present The house opened, secret revealed. (age 74) Tax Emily old and fat Emilys death
14Emily Grierson Images Rumors --the mad woman,
-- or a lady trying to love and to survive?
15Emily Different Images
16(1) Young Emily
- The decline of the Gierson family old Lady Wyatt
mad, two cousins away, only her father and her
left. - (1) Her Fathers control
- We had long thought of them as a tableau Miss
Emily a slender figure in white in the
background, her father a spraddled (??)
silhouette in the foreground, his back to her and
clutching a horsewhip, the two of them framed by
the back-flung front door. (par 25)
17The Young Emily isolated, trying to adjust
- After her fathers death ?
- 2) isolated, she refuses to accept it
- no trace of grief on her face. She told them
that her father was not dead - she would have to cling to that which had robbed
her, as people will. - 3) Trying to adjust? With an angelic look as a
girl, she is proud but trying to adjust (at the
age of 32?) - "When we saw her again, her hair was cut short,
making her look like a girl, with a vague
resemblance to those angels in colored church
windows-sort of tragic and serene" (par 29)
18(4) Emily Going for Arsenic
- (par 34) She was over thirty then, still a slight
woman, though thinner than usual, with cold,
haughty black eyes in a face the flesh of which
was strained across the temples and about the
eyesockets as you imagine a lighthouse-keepers
face ought to look. I want some poison, she
said. - The druggist looked down at her. She looked back
at him, erect, her face like a strained flag.
Why , of course, the druggist said. If thats
what you want. But the law requires you to tell
what you are going to use it for. - Miss Emily just stared at him, her head tilted
back in order to look him eye for eye, until he
looked away and went
19(5) Emily Smell Episode
- (par 24) a window that had been dark was lighted
and Miss Emily sat in it, the light behind her,
and her upright torso motionless as that of an
idol. They crept quietly across the lawn and into
the shadow of the locusts that lined the street. - After a week or two the smell went away
20(6) The Old Emily Tax Episode
- (par 6) a small, fat woman in black, with a thin
gold chain descending to her waist and vanishing
into her belt, leaning on an ebony cane with a
tarnished gold head. Her skeleton was small and
spare perhaps that was why what would have been
merely plumpness in another was obesity in her.
She looked bloated, like a body long submerged in
motionless water, and of that pallid hue. Her
eyes, lost in the fatty ridges of her face,
looked like two small pieces of coal pressed into
a lump of dough as they moved from one face to
another while the visitors stated their errand.
21(7) Emily The Elderly
- 3. (par 55) The funeral
- Emily underneath the bought flowers,
- the fathers crayon face above,
- the elderly talking of Miss Emily as if she had
been a contemporary of theirs, believing that
they had danced with her and courted her perhaps,
confusing time with its mathematical progression,
as the old do, to whom all the past is not a
diminishing road but, instead, a huge meadow
which no winter ever quite touches, divided from
them now by the narrow bottle-neck of the most
recent decade of years - ? the past is forever present other meanings?
- 4. The room upstairs with its rose decoration
22Two Concepts of Time
23Images of Love and Death
- See here
- Many others here, too.
24Pay close attention to the description of Emilys
Room
- (par 5) It smelled of dust and disusea close,
dank smell. The Negro led them into the parlor.
It was furnished in heavy, leather-covered
furniture. When the Negro opened the blinds of
one window, they could see that the leather was
cracked and when they sat down, a faint dust
rose sluggishly about their thighs, spinning with
slow motes in the single sun-ray.
25Pay close attention to the description of Emilys
Room
- A contrast to the image of the past as a green
meadow -- - (57) The violence of breaking down the door
seemed to fill this room with pervading dust. A
thin, acrid pall (????) as of the tomb seemed to
lie everywhere upon this room decked and
furnished as for a bridal (bridal chamber ??)
upon the valance curtains of faded rose color,
upon the rose-shaded lights, upon the dressing
table, upon the delicate array of crystal and the
mans toilet things backed with tarnished silver,
silver so tarnished that the monogram was
obscured. Among them lay a collar and tie, as if
they had just been removed, which, lifted, left
upon the surface a pale crescent in the dust.
Upon a chair hung the suit, carefully folded
beneath it the two mute shoes and the discarded
socks. - (58) The man himself lay in the bed.
26Pay close attention to the description of Emilys
Room
- Room death, decay rose color tender and
loving care in the arrangement - (60) Then we noticed that in the second pillow
was the indentation of a head. One of us lifted
something from it, and leaning forward, that
faint and invisible dust dry and acrid in the
nostrils, we saw a long strand of iron-gray hair.
27Narrators Their Contradictory Views -- Old
generations-- Younger generations
28Contradictory Views on Emily (1) As History
- A lady and the last Grierson
- for the town people
- An object of observation and gossip.
- A symbol of history
- Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty, and a
care a sort of hereditary obligation upon the
town. (par 3) - A strong personality and an old fashioned lady
Thus she passed from generation to
generation-dear, inescapable, impervious (?????),
tranquil, and perverse. (par 51)
29Contradictory Views on Emily (2) As a Lady
- 1) Finds the Griersons too proud
- Emily single at 30 ? Vindicated (proved right)
- 2) After the fathers death
- We people were glad. At last they could pity
Miss Emily. Being left alone, and a pauper, she
had become humanized. - Emilys denial of death ( dressed as usual and
with no trace of grief on her face. par 27) ?
Sympathetic not crazy we knew that with
nothing left, she would have to cling to that
which had robbed her, as people will. - 3) Poor Emily 4) feel sorry for her.
30Contradictory Views on Emily (2) As a Lady
- An object of observation and gossip.
- (par 25) smell episode That was when people had
begun to feel really sorry for her. People in our
town, remembering how old lady Wyatt, her
great-aunt, had gone completely crazy at last,
believed that the Griersons held themselves a
little too high for what they really were. None
of the young men were quite good enough for Miss
Emily and such. We had long thought of them as a
tableau, . So when she got to be thirty and was
still single, we were not pleased exactly, but
vindicated even with insanity in the family she
wouldn't have turned down all of her chances if
they had really materialized.
313) Town Peoples Intervention Gossips--Poor
Emily
- -- some glad, some disagreeing shouldnt forget
about her nobility Poor Emily. Her kinsfolk
should come to her. - --guessing and gossiping
- Poor Emily, the whispering began.
- Guess Of course it is. What else could . .
. This behind their hands secretly rustling
of craned silk and satin behind jalousies ???
closed upon the sun of Sunday afternoon as the
thin, swift clop-clop-clop of the matched team
passed Poor Emily.
32Town Peoples Intervention Gossips
- -- Gossips continued --
- (par 43) When she had first begun to be seen with
Homer Barron, we had said, She will marry him. - Then we said, She will persuade him yet,
because Homer himself had remarkedhe liked men,
and it was known that he drank with the younger
men in the Elks Clubthat he was not a marrying
man. Later we said, Poor Emily . . . - -- intervening
- Then the women see it a disgrace to the town and
a bad example to the young people. - ? the relatives are fetched.
33Town Peoples Intervention Gossips-
- (par 45) Emily bought a toilet set and suit for
the wedding ? They are married. We were really
glad - (par 43) Arsenic -- So the next day we all said,
She will kill herself and we said it would be
the best thing.
34Contradictory Views on Emily (3) As a Scandal
--The Smell Episode
- Conflicting View points among the town people
- The women the negroor any man--cannot do
good housekeeping. - another link between the gross, teeming world
and the high and mighty Griersons. - The young mansend her a word and ask her to
clean up her house and give her a deadline. - Judge Stevens cannot accuse a lady that she
smells.
All concerned with social proprietyof different
kinds, but not her well-being.
35Contradictory Views on Emily (3) As a Scandal
- To avoid confrontation (par 24)
- The men sneak there to sprinkle lime (as
disinfectant - ???) - They see Emily Miss Emily sat in it, the light
behind her, and her upright torso motionless as
that of an idol. - Then they feel really sorry for her. (par 25)
36Is Emily a Murderer?
37Emily on Trial Emily Empathized
- -- Group 2,4, 6, 8, 10, 12 Is Emily guilty of
murdering Homer Barron? -- Group 1,3, 5, 7, 9,
11 Why does she do it? What could have been done
to avoid it?
38- Opening statementsThe prosecution 4 and then
the defense 8 make opening statements to the
judge or jury. These statements provide an
outline of the case that each side expects to
prove. - 2) Prosecution case-in-chief The prosecution 4
presents its main case through direct examination
of prosecution witnesses. (Prosecution calls
witnesses from group 10 and 12.) - 3) Cross-examination. The defense 8 may
cross-examine the prosecution witnesses.Lawyer
--asking the witnesses to get direct evidence - 4) Defense case-in-chief.The defense 8
presents its main case through direct examination
of defense witnesses, including Emily 6 - 5) Cross-examination.
- The prosecutor cross-examines the defense
witnesses.6) 2 Judge's questions 7) Jury's
deliberations
39Courtroom Vocabulary --Simplified
evidence courtroom a trial sentence attorney
a witness Perpetrator Suspect defendant Plaintiff counsel for the defense counsel for the prosecution case the deceased the victim Prosecution/ Prosecutor custody lawyer
The court is now in session, .The case before us
is that of Id like to call my first
witness -- Thank you, . No further
questions. Sir, I must protest
40- George Oh, right, yes, uhhhh, oh.....Uh,
gentlemen, you have heard all the evidence
presented here today, but in the end it is up to
the conscience of your hearts to decide, and I
firmly believe, that like me, you will conclude
that Captain Blackadder is in fact, totally and
utterly, GUILTY......of nothing more than trying
to do his duty under difficult circumstances.
41Witnesses
For Prosecutor For Defendants Lawyer
those who complained about Emily's smell Colonel Sartoris or Judge Stevens (those who respect the Griersons as aristocrats)
those who witness her "fall"--going out with Homer Barron Those that say Poor Emily
the druggist that sells arsenic to Emily Those in their brushed Confederate uniforms that remember Emily as young
Tobe and the two cousins of Emily's a tradition, a duty, and a care for town people, a sort of hereditary obligation Tobe and the two cousins of Emily's a tradition, a duty, and a care for town people, a sort of hereditary obligation
42Witnesses
- 12 second generation
- ,
- those who g o inside the house and find the
corpse and other evidence (further divided into
men and women)
For Prosecutor For Defendants Lawyer
those who think Emily should pay tax Those taking painting lessons with Emily
Those that find her impervious and perverse Those that find her dear, inescapable and tranquil,
43Emily Empathized
- Factors to Consider
- Group 1-- Emily as the last Grierson
- Group 3 -- Emily as a symbol
- Group 5 -- The narrators
- Group 7 -- Historic setting
- Group 9 11 -- How to avoid it
44Lets Take a Break!!!
1018 1038 Discussion 1038 1118 Emily on
Trial 1120 1140 Emily Empathized 1140
1200 Peer Response Conclusion
45The Failure of Emilys Love Why?
- Dating Homer Barron, an Outsider
- A Northerner, but sociable (pretty soon he knew
everybody in town ? the center of a group.) - From a different class A foreman
- He likes only men.
- The town peoples intervention? getting the two
cousins to come - What could possibly be Emilys responses? The
meanings of her strained look (arsenic scene) ?
Why? -
46Emilys Stubbornness a. strongb. (The Smell)
obsessive?
- 1. Emily as a strong Lady vs. the Town
- Dammit, sir, Judge Stevens said, will you
accuse a lady to her face of smelling bad? - So she vanquished them, horse and foot, just as
she had vanquished their fathers thirty years
before about the smell. - 2. Love and death The smell (sec II two years
after her fathers death and a short time after
her sweetheart had deserted her) - ? She refuses to let go.
47Emilys Stubbornness c. Her Unmoved Image
Death
- (par 24) Emily sat in it, the light behind her,
and her upright torso motionless as that of an
idol. - (par 51) Now and then we would see her in one of
the downstairs windowsshe had evidently shut up
the top floor of the houselike the carven torso
of an idol in a niche, looking or not looking at
us, we could never tell which.
48Emily (3) Images of Death vs. Strong Will
- Death
- Her bloating body
- Her death.
- She died in one of the downstairs rooms, in a
heavy walnut bed with a curtain, her gray head
propped on a pillow yellow and moldy with age and
lack of sunlight.
- Strong Will
- Her keeping a corpse with her.
- Hair -- pepper-and-salt iron-gray, like the hair
of an active man. - On the bed a long strand of iron-gray hair.
49Note
- Old South vs. New South -- Following the Civil
War, prominent Southern whites wanted to portray
the New South as a region which no longer
embraced the plantation and slave labor mentality
of the "Old South." The New South had the same
capability to develop manufacturing and industry
as the North. However, this New South creed
became more of a slogan for various Southern
towns and cities, but it wasn't exactly the
public relations miracle many elite Southerners
hoped it would be. While many Southern states did
start to distance themselves from the prejudices
and inequalities of the Old South, there were
still a number of issues which continued to
tarnish the perception of a truly New South.
Segregation between blacks and whites was still
an active practice, for example. (source) - noblesse oblige (sec 3)-- "Noblesse oblige" is
generally used to imply that with wealth, power
and prestige come responsibilities. (source)
50Genre The Gothic Story
- The Gothic horror tale is a literary form dating
back to 1764 with the first novel identified with
the genre, Horace Walpole's The Castle of
Ontralto. Gothicism features an atmosphere of
terror and dread gloomy castles or mansions,
sinister characters, and unexplained phenomena.
Gothic novels and stories also often include
unnatural combinations of sex and death. - Some can be thrilling, and some, profound
discovery of human nature (unconsciousness)
51A Rose for Emily as a southern gothic
- disturbed people doing disturbing things
- strange characters
- macabre occurrences
- grotesque
- social issues, behavioral codes
- taboo topics
- American Gothic
Norton
52William Faulkner on Emily
Norton
- From Faulkner at Nagano (1956)
- Faulkner I feel sorry for Emilys tragedy
her tragedy was, she was an only child, an only
daughter. At the time when she could have found a
husband, could have had a life of her own, there
was probably some one, her father, who said, No,
you must stay here and take care of me. And then
when she found a man, she had no experience in
people. She picked out probably a bad one, who
was about to desert her. And when she lost him
she could see that for her that was the end of
life, there was nothing left, except to grow
older, alone, solitary she had had something and
she wanted to keep it, which is badto go to any
length to keep something but I pity Emily.
53William Faulkner on Emily and the Title
- I dont know whether I would have liked her or
not, I might have been afraid of her. Not of her
but of anyone who had suffered, had been warped,
as her life had probably been warped by a selfish
father. - The title was an allegorical title the meaning
was, here was a woman who had had a tragedy, an
irrevocable tragedy and nothing could be done
about it, and I pitied her and this was a salute
. . . to a woman you would hand a rose.
From Faulkner at Nagano, ed. Robert Jelliffe
(Tokyo Kenkyusha Ltd., 1956), pp. 7071.
54A Rose for Emily - The Zombies
Introduction to Literature
55Mid-Term Exam
- Text Analysis Questions (30) -- 2 out of 4
- Essay Questions (30) 2 out of 4 no
overlapping of choice of texts in Part 1) and 2) - Comparison Question (40) -- 1 out of 2
56Mid-Term Exam
- Essay Questions choose 2
- Where does the narrator show the environment
more than tell what happens in Boys and
Girls? Give two examples and explain the
effects. - How is Mangans Sister described in Araby with
what images and why? - How do you describe Sammys language in A P?
Analyze at least two features and give examples
to each. - How do you characterize the narrators in A Rose
for Emily?