Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £28.88 GBP
Regular price £22.99 GBP Sale price £28.88 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Fictions of Labor
William Faulkner and the South's Long Revolution

A study of William Faulkner's writing and issues of labour in the American South.

Richard Godden (Author)

9780521044271, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 11 October 2007

308 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 2 cm, 0.463 kg

Fictions of Labor considers William Faulkner's representation of the structural paradoxes of labour dependency in the Southern economy from the antebellum period through to the New Deal. This book seeks to link stylistic aspects of Faulkner's writing to a generative social trauma which constitutes its formal core. That trauma, Godden argues, is a labour trauma, centred on the debilitating discovery by the Southern owning class of its own production by those it subordinates. Using close textual analysis and careful historical contextualization, Richard Godden produces a persuasive account of the ways in which Faulkner's work rests on deeply submerged anxieties about the legacy of violently coercive labour relations in the American South.

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Quentin Compson: Tyrrhenian vase or crucible of race?
2. Absalom, Absalom! Haiti and labor history: reading unreadable revolutions
3. Absalom, Absalom! and Rosa Coldfield: or, 'What is in the Dark House?'
4. The persistence of Thomas Sutpen: Absalom, Absalom!, time, and labor discipline
5. Forget Jerusalem, go to Hollywood - 'To Die. Yes. To Die?' (A coda to Absalom, Absalom!)
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography of works cited
Index.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]

View full details