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Analysis Of William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

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“A Rose for Emily”
William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” tells a story about the life of a woman who grows up in a small southern town shortly after the turn of the 20th century. He tells the reader about the struggles that Ms. Emily and town of Jefferson face in trying to move on from their past and adjusting to the inevitable changes that time brings.
Hans H Skei writes in his critical essay that “A Rose for Emily” is the first story about Faulkner’s townspeople in any real sense, and it is the first story in which” a community point-of-view—through a first-person plural narrator” (Skei). In reading Faulkner’s story, the reader can see that when the narrator uses “we”, that he is referring to the people of the town. By doing this, the reader gets a sense that even though the title of the story has the main character’s name in it, Faulkner considers the townspeople to be just as important as Emily in “A Rose for Emily”. In the story Faulkner writes how both of these characters struggle with the changes that occur throughout the passing years.
Managing change is difficult, but inevitable. Changes also affect people differently. While some people thrive, others have a harder time in adjusting. While describing Ms. Emily’s house, the narrator tells the reader that cotton mills and warehouses are encroaching on her house. Ms. Emily’s house is described in the story as a style from some years past. In fact, her house was built in the 1870’s. What once had been a residential area of the town, is now turning into a thriving industrial district. This suggests to the reader that the town is progressing while Ms. Emily is stuck in the past. However, the reader can see from the first part of the story that the people of the town have not been able to moved on from their past either.
The story starts out at Ms. Emily’s funeral. The narrator also tells the reader that for Ms. Emily’s funeral, everyone that lived in the town showed up. During the 1800’s and earlier, weddings and funerals in southern towns were treated as events where everyone was included. But during the time period of the story, weddings and funerals were only for close friends and family. Faulkner also writes “the men through a sort of respectful

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