Addie Bundren Essay

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    Jefferson's Journey

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    and the life struggles they are facing and arise with the death of their matriarch, Addie Bundren. The novel begins with Addie lying on her bed, dying, and seeing her eldest son Cash build her coffin. She was aware that her time on earth was coming to an end and her last wish was to be buried in her hometown of Jefferson, Mississippi. When she died her family got together and took the journey to Jefferson to give Addie her last wish. The novel, which is narrated by the different family members, friends

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    difficult, especially with a society that forces its standards and expectations on you as well. Addie Bundren possessed qualities and viewpoints most others did not. She found words useless while actions are what held real meaning, yet her whole life had seemed to be made up of words. As her dying wish, she asked her husband to perform an action – taking her to Jefferson to be buried. Darl Bundren was considered the queer one among the family. He had chosen to express his identity through his

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    There are many characters that Faulkner mentions in the first twenty five pages of the novels and so I was trying to connect the characters and find out who was who. Faulkner also constantly refers to Addie as “she”. This confused me at first because I didn’t know who Faulkner was referring to and how Addie was related to all of the other characters. I found that as long as I read very slowly and pay attention to detail, I can understand the language of the story better than I expected. I was able to

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    Staggered, yet continuous of each other, the monologues are in rendition of the character’s memories, inner thoughts, accounts or feelings of tragedy encompassed by the dying, death and burial journey of Addie Bundren. Addie Bundren is the wife of Anse Bundren and mother to Cash, Darl, Jewel, Dewey Dell, and Vardaman. The characters take turns, sometimes simultaneously, expressing their thoughts about this tragedy and the life they live. Similar to the cubist expression, their thoughts

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    what it means to be a woman, and how it affects their place in society. William Faulkner carefully incorporates issues of sexuality and gender roles into his novel, which were also common themes discussed during the 1900’s. By examining Addie Bundren, Dewey Dell Bundren and Cora Tull one can see that each of their gender roles was clearly defined. All three women search for the meaning of life while exploring ideas of religion and sin. Faulkner shows the expectations placed on women and how it affected

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    William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying Essay

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    of the characters from whose perspective the story is narrated are members of the same family, the Bundrens. The other characters are onlookers of the Bundrens’ journey to bury their mother, Addie. Each character responds to the events that are unfolding in a unique way and his or her reactions help to characterize themselves and others. “…each private world manifests

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    In As I Lay Dying, with his unique and modern writing style, Faulkner and portrays the Bundrens’ struggle to deal with a death in the family. He shows how this dysfunctional family, caged in by societal norms and their individual emotional battle, ultimately falls into an abyss of unending hopelessness and despair. Throughout the Bundrens’ journey, Faulkner uses common archetypes in order to challenge his readers’ and society’s ingrained perceptions of families and suffering and to demonstrate how

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    settings in the story. Aside from the novel’s complications, the storyline was very intriguing due to the chain of events that happened. Already in the beginning of the story, Addie who is introduced as very ill is the

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    In the novel, As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner, Faulkner uses conflict as a way to develop the story and engage the reader. The Bundren family is used by Faulkner specifically because they have the most opportunity for unfortunate events to occur. Within the Bundren family, internal and external conflicts become a part of the family’s daily routine, and an average occurrence. Internal Conflict is a conflict that occurs within a character and an external conflict is a conflict that occurs between

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    great controversy. The book was banned for several “un-normal” things that were spoken about in the book such as anti-Christian references, sexual exploitation, and vulgar language. As I Lay Dying gives us an up-close-and-personal look into the Bundren family as they make a journey to try and bury the beloved mother and wife with the rest of her family. It is written in a stream of consciousness point of view which can make it immensely difficult to understand, at times, and it has little grammar

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