HomePosts Tagged "flannery o’connor" (Page 3)

Spring 2014 Books & Film Class Topic – Faulkner & Flannery: Exploring the Southern Gothic Held Wednesdays through February 26 at UL Lafayette Instructor: Dr. Mary Ann Wilson Notes will be updated each Friday through February 28; comment to join in the discussion. On Wednesday, we delved into Faulkner's second novel As I Lay Dying. His most well known and the one that's taught in high school English, this novel has all the elements of the Southern Gothic. "You can't get more Southern Gothic than carting your mother's rotting corpse across the state for burial," says Dr. Wilson. As I Lay Dying is also one of the few books by Faulkner that has much humor in it, but not everyone in class agreed with that. Some viewed the novel as quite dark, but I can admit I chuckled a few times, especially in some scenes with Anse Bundren. It also helps to consider the time period this book is set in — the Depression-era South — and that the Bundren family is poor white trash, only a step up from the African Americans, who are mostly absent in this book. Most of them have their own motives for wanting to go to Jefferson to bury their mother,

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Spring 2014 Books & Film Class Topic - Faulkner & Flannery: Exploring the Southern Gothic Held Wednesdays through February 19 at UL Lafayette Instructor: Dr. Mary Ann Wilson Notes will be updated each Friday through February 21; comment to join in the discussion. I arrived to a full classroom on Wednesday, and English professor Mary Ann Wilson began with an introduction to the Southern Gothic and the parallels between Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner. Both Southern Gothic writers working in the 1950s and early 1960s, they certainly used similar techniques in storytelling and were inspired by their surroundings, while at the same time turning out very different work. It's easy to say that Faulkner is the more famous of the two, but O'Connor's Library of America volume of collected works outsold Faulkner's. Southern Gothic - a style of writing practiced by many writers of the American South whose stories set in that region are characterized by grotesque, macabre, or fantastic incidents.  Although living two states away in central Georgia, while Faulkner was in Oxford, Mississippi, O'Connor was aware of him, as he was a giant in American literature when she was just getting started. Her best known quote about him is "I keep clear of Faulkner so my

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24 new releases, including several author debuts and a few classics, that span from mystery to memoir, spiritual to historical and romantic to coming of age.

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A book giveaway for Michael Farris Smith's "Rivers." Literary landmarks, Flannery O'Connor's Prayer Journal and Walker Percy in Literary News. (Non)Required reading about bridging the blues. Booksignings and book festivals in Literary Events, plus a new poem and flash fiction in Southern Voice. Happy Literary Friday!

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