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Analysis Of As I Lay Dying

Decent Essays

As I Lay Dying In the article “Being, Knowing, and Saying in the ‘Addie’ Section of Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying,” Constance Pierce discusses the character Addie in depth. The article grapples with the struggles of Addie Bundren and her sense of ‘Being.’ The book As I Lay Dying, written by William Faulkner brings to life the often-forgotten ordinary man and divulges in very real description their struggles; Addie being the mother of the family. And Pierce goes into detail on a single character – Addie. I agree with Pierce’s evaluation of Addie’s struggles, but I do not agree with the extent that Addie becomes depicted as a philosopher. I think that Faulkner did not intend her for that role. The depiction of Addie’s struggles is articulated thoroughly. Subconsciously, she is pitted into denial, because of her family. Addie says, “I would think Cash and Darl that way until their names would die and solidify into a shape and then fade away” (Faulkner 173). She no longer thought of her children with love, but rather thought of them as simply names, their person simply as a shape. Her love for her children, except for Jewel, became just a word (Pierce 299). Not only did she struggle to love her family, but Addie hated the essence of biological nature (299). She “knew that motherhood was invented by one who had to have a word for it,” and the inventor of this motherhood was nature (Faulkner 171). The concept of words described in this section points to Addie’s displeasure in

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