Addie Bundren Essay

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    of their days. The concept of such a desired and completed journey of motherhood and womanhood is dismantled in William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying. On a spectrum of maternity, characters Cora Tull, Addie Bundren and her daughter Dewey Dell each represent a different degree. Cora is a dedicated mother, Addie struggles to accept the idea of motherhood, and Dewey Dell rejects the role altogether. Through these female characters, Faulkner also aims to point out the absurdity of the universal experience

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    broken. The relationships between the father Anse, the mother Addie, the sons Cash, Darl, Jewel, Vardaman, and the only daughter Dewey Dell are all very different from each other. In As I lay Dying, the death of Addie and the dysfunction of the family dynamics, leads to the downfall of each character. The most important member of the family is Addie Bundren who is the deceased mother that is even ruling the family from the grave. Addie has one chapter in the novel, and the whole time she complains

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    the Southern Gothic genre that consisted of grotesque themes to catch the audience’s attention and make them aware of the flaws that exist within society. One of his best works, As I Lay Dying, epitomizes the genre through the examination of the Bundren family and the events that follow them in Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi. In the 1930 novel As I Lay Dying, Faulkner combines both his preference to write about women and the Gothic genre by broadcasting the mistreatment and belittlement of women

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    Jake Barns, in Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and Darl Bundren in William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying both have a certain desire, throughout their respective novels, for the affection and attention of a particular woman in their lives. For Jake it is Brett, and for Darl it is his own mother, Addie Bundren. However due to unfortunate occurrences in their lives, they can no longer gain that love and affection. Daryl and Jake both seek for the attraction of a woman in their life but due to circumstances

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    Lafayette County, Mississippi. As I Lay dying is the first to introduce Faulkner’s fictional county. Because of Faulkner’s upbringing in the south he was familiar with the type of person presented through the characters of the Bundrens. As I Lay Dying tells the story of the Bundrens a poor family from the Deep South that faces trials and tragedy on their journey to bury their dead

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    model, he is most similar to Jewel Bundren. Both characters are abusive towards their family, one of the strongest members, and something is above their family; for Jewel it is his horse, and as stated earlier, Richard it is his job (Typeset World). Sheryl Hoover can be looked at as a shape shifter, in relation to her loving her husband, but then at times be completely frustrated with him and wanting a divorce (Archetypes). She is most relatable to Anse Bundren, the father of the Bundren’s. Both

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    In an essay by Elizabeth Kerr, she recounts the novel of As I Lay Dying as an “ironic quest” by the Bundren family to take the family matriarch, Addie Bundren, upon her death, to Jefferson to be buried (5-6). This critique of the novel does well to include the irony of the story by explaining how each of the characters except Darl and Jewel, have their own agendas for wanting to

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    As I Lay Dying Themes

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    technique. Family loyalty plays a significant role in As I Lay Dying.” Faulkner questions the nature of family and the duties their-in”. (Course Hero) The amount of longing for a sense of safety and family to express the feeling is illusory. Addie Bundren, main character in the novel, believes that many things in the small town are falling short of ideas and emotion. Very little

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    As I Lay Dying, a novel written by William Faulkner, describes the journey that the Bundren family makes to bury their mother. Along the trip Mrs. Bundren passes away and leaves behind her 5 kids and husband. The kids all have their own serious issues, and their father, Anse, is too self absorbed to care. The children transport their mother, and the hatred they have towards one another builds up and becomes exposed. Throughout the novel, Faulkner asserts that families need an understanding of love

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    An archetypal journey may be defined as one where a hero or set of heroes is faced with unexpected trials and misfortunes. An example of such a journey would be Faulkner’s story, As I Lay Dying. In this story, the unstable Bundren family board on a journey to Jefferson in order to keep their mother’s promise of being buried with her own people. The family faces many challenging obstacles, but reach their destination by the end. Similarly, in Dayton and Faris’s Little Miss Sunshine, the dysfunctional

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