Name: _____________________ Date: __________________
A Rose for Emily
Period: ______
Pg. 715
Intro A Story by 1949 Nobel Prize Winner, William Faulkner (1897-19____) Born __________ in Oxford, Mississippi or, as told in his stories, _________________ County, Mississippi. His father, __________ __________, ran a stable and later became the business manager of the state’s main university.
Life of Faulkner Faulkner quits __________ __________ in the tenth grade but still read widely and wrote poetry. He tried to join the __________ at the outbreak of World War I but was rejected due to __________ and __________ requirement. Joined the __________ __________ __________ of Canada and trained for flight duty but was commissioned for the army right after the war ended.
Faulkner’s Writing In 1924, Faulkner went to __________ __________ and met Sherwood Anderson. In three years, Faulkner started to bas his novels on the __________ __________, which was the theme for all of his stories from then on. He saw a strong sense of its noble past and pride, despite losing the __________ __________.
Writing Style Faulkner described his South through __________ families who often reappear from novel to novel. He shows the __________ and __________ ways of the South and interprets it to his stories
The Dream Faulkner received the __________ __________ in literature in 1950. He kept writing throughout his time and experimenting different ways of storytelling. Faulkner states that everyone fails to meet perfection but are at least __________ for trying to do the impossible and also the mistake of any novel is if it fails to create __________for the reader.
Image Source (Top Right Hand Corner): http://madnessofart.com/wp-content/uploads/faulkner.jpg
Setting A Rose for Emily takes place in the early part of the _______________ century in the South in __________. This is still the time period when __________ __________ were discriminated against. The rural town of the Jefferson is racially __________; just it was in the early twentieth century.
Themes 1. Death –
2. Decline of the Old South –
3. Community Vs. Isolation –
Literary Devices 1. Setting –
2. Flashback –
3. Point of View – a. White
b. Black
4. Racial Tensions in the South –
Words to Own:
Perpetuity, Archaic, Vindicated, Pauper, Circumvent, Virulent, Tranquil, Doddering, Acrid, Valence