Responses to Faulkner's Light in August
By Lauren Reis, published May 30, 2006
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The reader need barely have cognitive functions to realize that one more time, Faulkner has presented his audience with an isolated, melancholy spinster. Instead, what is most fascinating about this brief passage is that Christmas operated his business shrouded in the darkness of night and went utterly undetected in his plight for a couple of years. An interesting parallel can be drawn between this instance and pre-Civil war slavery, in which slave owners ran their plantations with dark, Negro workers; these actions were not recognized or refuted until years later, resulting in nationwide unrest and eventually war.
“And that’s all it took; all that was lacking. Byron listened quietly, thinking to himself how people everywhere are about the same, but that it did seem that in a small town, where evil is harder to accomplish, where opportunities for privacy are scarcer, that people can invent more of it in other people’s names. Because that was all it required: that idea, that single idle word blown from mind to mind” (71).
Another theme that appears often in Faulkner – though not necessarily a central feature of his critics’ focus – is the effects of living in a small town or in a small county, namely Yoknapatawpha County. While many characters do travel, they tend to travel together or coincidentally, end up in the same place. The small town environment does not allow anyone to truly hide; Miss Coldfield, Addie, Emily Rose, Mrs. Compson and several others are all isolated due to either sickness or bitter depression and yet, none of them can maintain their privacy forever. Likewise, it is even more difficult for regular members of society to keep to themselves and live without judgment.
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