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The Alienation of Emily Grierson

Decent Essays

In William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily", a woman of noble origin, Emily Grierson, finds herself alone isolated in a small town in the Old South. The isolation is not only a result of the townspeople's perception of Emily's status in the community, but also as a result of their pity towards her. Emily, herself, is also to blame for the separation she experiences from the rest of the town. This ominous alienation that some individuals encounter can sometimes lead to horrible, and even, disgusting behavior, as in Emily's case. In "A Rose for Emily", Faulkner shows how the alienation felt by Emily Grierson caused by the townspeople, the death of her father, and her own self, enables her to commit an act of grotesqueness. Emily's feeling …show more content…

Although Homer Baron was said to have "liked men" and was considered "not a marrying man," he was the closest person Emily could call a friend. (5) Faulkner does not clarify exactly how Mr. Baron died. The reader is left wondering if it was indeed Emily herself that killed him with the arsenic she purchased from the drugstore, or if his death was due to another cause. Either way, the tragedy of his death was enough to send Emily deeper into her alienated thoughts and further into her own secluded madness. "A Rose for Emily" reveals how an otherwise, ordinary individual can grow increasingly separated from the social world around them, and become subsequently alienated from logical thought and reasonable actions. Due to the standoffishness of the townspeople and Emily's superior than thou attitude, it was easy for her to fall subject to the isolated, lonely feelings that led her to commit the otherwise grotesque act of love and

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