YoVDO

Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury - Jason's Section and the Loss of Knowable Community

Offered By: Yale University via YouTube

Tags

Literary Analysis Courses American Literature Courses Modernism Courses William Faulkner Courses

Course Description

Overview

Explore a 46-minute lecture from Yale University's "Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner" course, focusing on Jason's section in Faulkner's "The Sound and the Fury." Delve into Professor Wai Chee Dimock's analysis of the loss of "knowable community" and its impact on Jason's narrative. Examine how Faulkner portrays Jason's anger towards family, servants, and larger entities as a reflection of the modern condition. Investigate the concept of kinship, scale enlargement, and the symbolism of Jason's car. Learn about Raymond Williams' theory of knowable communities and its application to Jefferson and New York. Discover Faulkner's nuanced portrayal of Jason, expressing sympathy for his loss of a utopian community model. Note: This lecture contains graphic content and adult language that may be disturbing to some viewers.

Syllabus

- Chapter 1. Kinship and Variation as Brotherhood
.
- Chapter 2. Scale Enlargement in the Jason Section
.
- Chapter 3. Jason and His Car
.
- Chapter 4. Raymond Williams and Knowable Communities
.
- Chapter 5. Knowable Community in Jefferson
.
- Chapter 6. Unknowable Communities in New York
.
- Chapter 7. Western Union
.
- Chapter 8. Faulkner's Sympathy for Jason
.


Taught by

YaleCourses

Tags

Related Courses

Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World
University of Michigan via Coursera
The Ancient Greeks
Wesleyan University via Coursera
The Fiction of Relationship
Brown University via Coursera
Comic Books and Graphic Novels
University of Colorado Boulder via Coursera
Poetry in America: The Poetry of Early New England
Harvard University via edX