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William Faulknera guide to his writing
William Faulkner (1897—1962) grew up in Oxford, Mississippi, and lived there for the rest of his life - with only brief intermissions for travel and working in Hollywood as a screenwriter. He was one of the major American writers of the early twentieth century. He established the white protestant version of the American south, reflecting its values of that period - the collapse of the white land owning aristocracy and the inability (at that time) of the blacks to shake off the legacy of slavery.
Faulkner was a literary experimentalist, influenced by the modernist period, and he sometimes makes extreme demands on his readers. He uses stream of consciousness, fragmented chronology, shifting point of view, and multiple narrative voices. Even in some of his plain narratives, the story is expressed in sentences which sometimes go on for two or three pages at a time.
Much of his fictional output centres on an imaginary part of the south which he called Yoknapatwapha County. He was also partly responsible for generating the modern version of the literary genre called 'Southern Gothic' - stories which often feature grotesque scenes, violence and horror, distorted characters, melodrama, and sensationalism. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1949, but like his contemporary Ernest Hemingway, his reputation seems not to be wearing too well with time.
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