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Southern Gothic Literature

Southern Gothic Literature. William Faulkner and Flannery O’Connor. Gothic Literature. Popular in Europe in 1800’s Known for creepy landscapes (castles, cemeteries) Death, supernatural, haunted houses Use of the grotesque Classic archetypes

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Southern Gothic Literature

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  1. Southern Gothic Literature William Faulkner and Flannery O’Connor

  2. Gothic Literature • Popular in Europe in 1800’s • Known for creepy landscapes (castles, cemeteries) • Death, supernatural, haunted houses • Use of the grotesque • Classic archetypes • Tyrants, villains, ghosts, nuns, monks, magicians

  3. Southern Gothic Literature • Relies on supernatural, ironic or unusual events to guide the plot • Uses these to explore social issues and reveal cultural character of the south (not just to be creepy) • Takes gothic archetypes and turns them into American Southerners: • Spiteful, reclusive spinster; uneducated drunk; quiet, wise lawyer • Focus on the “landscape of the mind”

  4. Most notable feature: grotesque • A grotesque character inspires both empathy and disgust • Physically deformed, mentally deficient, socially unfit • Character whose negative qualities let author highlight unpleasant aspects in southern culture

  5. Other features: • Freakishness • Set apart from world in negative way b/c of disability or negative view of the world • Outsider • Set apart from cultural pattern-often turn into heroes because of this • Imprisonment • Literal or figurative • Violence • Racial/social/class tensions erupt in violence • Sense of place • Old, small, Southern towns

  6. William Faulkner 1897-1962

  7. Biography • Oxford, Mississippi • Created an imaginary town based on Oxford • Yoknapatawpha • Broke all literary rules • Chronology, narrative structure, punctuation, point of view, stream of consciousness • Extremely long, complicated sentences • Not accepted at first: too hard to understand and too weird to accept • Both affectionate and critical toward the South • Themes: tradition, family, community, land, history, race

  8. Examples of Stream-of-consciousness • For example, DarlBundren in As I Lay Dying thinks: "I am I and you are you and I know it and you dont know it and you could do so much for me if you just would and if you just would then I could tell you and then nobody would have to know it except you and me and Darl" (p. 51). Or consider The Sound and the Fury when Quentin Compson remembers: "A face reproachful tearful an odor of camphor and of tears a voice weeping steadily and softly beyond the twilit door the twilight-colored smell of honeysuckle" (p.95).

  9. Flannery O’Connor 1925-1964

  10. Biography • Born in Savannah, Georgia • Defined by region and religion • Georgia/Catholic • Satirist (social criticism where shortcomings are pointed out in hopes that they will be fixed) • Main targets: smugness, optimism, and self-righteousness • All work grows from Christian vision of secular society • At age 25 became ill with Lupus

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