Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury - Experimental Subjectivity and Benjy's Narrative
Offered By: Yale University via YouTube
Course Description
Overview
Explore a 50-minute lecture from Yale University's "Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner" course, focusing on William Faulkner's "The Sound and the Fury." Delve into the novel's origins, including influences from Shakespeare's Macbeth and theories of mental deficiency by John Locke and Henry Goddard. Examine the experimental subjectivity in Benjy Compson's narration, a mentally challenged character whose innocence shields him from his family's decline. Analyze Faulkner's use of smell as a narrative device, particularly in relation to Benjy's sister Caddy and her perceived innocence. Investigate how Faulkner's narrative techniques protect Benjy from loss by allowing him to move seamlessly between past and present. The lecture covers topics such as idiocy as innocence, Freudian concepts of smell, and the syntactic consequences of losing Caddy in the narrative.
Syllabus
- Chapter 1. Images of Faulkner's Oxford, Mississippi
.
- Chapter 2. The Genesis of The Sound and the Fury
.
- Chapter 3. Idiocy as Innocence in Benjy's Section
.
- Chapter 4. Faulkner and John Locke
.
- Chapter 5. Taxonomies of Mental Deficiency
.
- Chapter 6. The Subjectivity of "A Tale Told By An Idiot"
.
- Chapter 7. Freud and the Sense of Smell
.
- Chapter 8. The Sense of Smell as an Index to Sexual Innocence
.
- Chapter 9. The Syntactic Consequences of Losing Caddy
.
- Chapter 10. Sheilding Benjy through Narrative
.
Taught by
YaleCourses
Tags
Related Courses
Poetry in America: WhitmanHarvard University via edX Poetry in America: Nature and Nation, 1700-1850
Harvard University via edX "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Twain: BerkeleyX Book Club
University of California, Berkeley via edX The American Renaissance: Classic Literature of the 19th Century
Dartmouth College via edX Poetry in America: Modernism
Harvard University via edX