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13. William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom! (1936)

  • Heide Ziegler

Abstract

Absalom, Absalom! has been understood as a novel about how the slavery- based plantation culture of the American South was doomed from its very beginning, because the threats of incest and miscegenation loomed large in this self-made and thus radical patriarchal society. The novel’s hero went to the West Indies as a young man and married the daughter of a plantation owner, but rejected her and their son when he found out that they were part black. Thus, this son is now often heralded as a revolutionary character who defies his father through his very hybridity. However, it can be shown that all of Sutpen’s four children, whether white or black, male or female, eventually come to resist him in the name of humanity. This truth is only gradually approached with the help of Faulkner’s various narrators who help to define the novel’s topic: love as imaginary, narrated by and substantiated through the suffering of the next generation.

Abstract

Absalom, Absalom! has been understood as a novel about how the slavery- based plantation culture of the American South was doomed from its very beginning, because the threats of incest and miscegenation loomed large in this self-made and thus radical patriarchal society. The novel’s hero went to the West Indies as a young man and married the daughter of a plantation owner, but rejected her and their son when he found out that they were part black. Thus, this son is now often heralded as a revolutionary character who defies his father through his very hybridity. However, it can be shown that all of Sutpen’s four children, whether white or black, male or female, eventually come to resist him in the name of humanity. This truth is only gradually approached with the help of Faulkner’s various narrators who help to define the novel’s topic: love as imaginary, narrated by and substantiated through the suffering of the next generation.

Heruntergeladen am 25.1.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110422429-015/html
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