“A Rose for Emily” is a short Southern Gothic story by William Faulkner, first published in 1930. The story is about the life of the titular character, Emily Grierson, as seen through the eyes of the residents of Faulkner’s fictitious city, Jefferson, Mississippi. With this in mind, the city of Jefferson is just as important as Emily. By the same token, I believe that Jefferson becomes a character in and of itself. As we learn about Emily through the years, we also learn a lot about Jefferson. Faulkner employs the setting as a way to weave through the post-Civil War Southern society. Jefferson is an important factor in understanding the characters, their actions and motivations. Before I go in depth on “A Rose for Emily”, I would like to …show more content…
As the years went by, the tragedy that is Emily Grierson just kept on escalating. Not only is the Grierson House decrepit, but so is she. Provided that her father’s death loomed over like a shadow for the rest of her life. She never really got to develop like a normal person. Thus, Emily doesn’t really know or have a way to truly express herself. There are terrible secrets everywhere, like Homer Barron’s corpse. Barron’s corpse shows how detached and unresolved Emily was. She was afraid of letting go of the things she loved. She never accept her Mr. Grierson’s death. So, she decided to do some necrophilia in order to preserve Homer. Furthermore, Faulkner uses a variety of worlds to humanize Emily as the story progress. For one thing, Emily is initially described as “a fallen monument,” (Meyer 54) and “a tradition, a duty, and a care.” (Meyer 55). These are not words to describe a person, these are words that a describe an object. In a lot of ways, Emily was not seen as a person by anyone. This also explains why she locked herself in her house for the rest of her life. The House becomes more dilapidated as Emily’s life gets worse. Overall, I think The House is the perfect representation of the themes that Faulkner explored. “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner is a captivating story about the past, isolation, and America. Faulkner perfectly captures the time period through his literary techniques, particularly the Grierson House. He builds his themes in and around the House. The Grierson is a perfect representation of Emily, change, and society. For this reason, it is a physical
Paloma Cerda Mrs. Koehler ENGL-1301-566 September 20, 2017 In A Rose for Emily written by William Faulkner, the story of Miss Emily is told through a very loose format. Through this narration, there is a long and drawn out suspense built up through little hints left by the reader without fully giving away the dark truth behind Emily and her house. Until the end of the story, the narrators ambiguity cleverly points the reader towards the climax of the story where Emily is discovered to be Homer Barron’s killer. This ambiguous element is important to the quality of this short story as it drives it forward and keeps the reader interested.
“A Rose for Emily” is a dark, suspenseful Gothic tale in which a young girl is put on a pedestal by a town who sees her as haughty and scornful. Miss Emily Grierson’s father controls her and her love life, pushing away all people until he dies and Emily is left alone. As her life goes on the townspeople watch her and judge Emily, almost turning her life into a spectacle to be talked about. At her death, a gruesome sight is unfolded when her lover of over forty years ago is found decomposed in her upstairs room. William Faulkner effectively builds epic suspense in “A Rose for Emily” by the unchronological order of the story, the treatment of Emily’s father towards her, and her family’s history of mental illness.
The author states, ¨After her father’s death She rarely went out - said Emily began to isolate herself from everyone and the world. It was at this time that the town "could pity" her, and with her now "left alone, and a pauper" she was finally "humanized". The people of Jefferson did not once question Emily or consider her a threat to others because she covered up her absurd actions. Aside from her father, she meets with a blue-collar worker from the North, Homer Barron as her love interest.
Amy Bushong Composition II, 16577 Literary Devices 10-16-14 A Watch for Emily In William Faulkner’s A Rose for Emily, time is the relentless master to which society must bow down or be left in its wake, and those who cannot accept change will be left to descend into madness and murder. This is the case with Emily when she refuses to let go of a time long since passed, and resorts to unscrupulous methods in an attempt to preserve tradition.
The value of romance and mortality resembles the theme of obsession, and is shown throughout the plots, and the characters in, “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner and “The Birth Mark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Firstly, Faulkner illustrates obsession of romance through mortality. In addition, Emily’s obsessive illness of love over death it often seen throughout the plot. Lastly, Hawthorne demonstrates the obsession of mortality thorough romance, through the main protagonist, Aylmer in “The Birth Mark.” To compare, Emily and Aylmer believe their obsessive consequences was from the heart, despite their obsessive disorders.
In William Faulkner’s, “A Rose for Emily,” the historical context is important to understand. In order to fully comprehend the short story there must be some sort of understanding about the time period in which the story took place. This short story took place in the 18th/19th century during and after the Civil War in the South. In “A Rose for Emily” the historical context shows the social, economic, and the cultural environment of the background. Miss Emily was born during the Civil War.
One of William Faulkner’s best short story of all time is “A Rose for Emily.” The story is a suspense and horror, that will leave readers in shock. Additionally, the story is in chronological order and cleverly broken down into five parts. The first part of the story is the current event that shows Emily’s funeral and the town people mourning. The other four part are pieces of puzzle that shows flash backs of Emily Grierson on how the everyone in town viewed her.
“A Rose for Emily” was written in 1931 by William Faulkner. The story is about a woman named Emily Grierson, a woman who lived in the South and was deeply admired by the community, but it starts off as her funeral. The townspeople placed her on a pedestal and viewed her as “a tradition, a duty” because of her father’s standing in the community before he died. The town feels the need to protect, and watch out for Emily the way they would anybody else but she prevents people from getting “too close” to her. The townspeople bear responsibility for what became of Emily because of their absence to acknowledge the Southern compassion she deserved from her father’s death and the negligence of enforcing the laws because of who she was.
However, the author's final message did not conclude here. As revealed in the story, "The man himself lay in the bed... rotted beneath" (Faulkner 8). Decades before Emily's death, the story exposes the reality that Emily poisoned Homer Barron and kept his dead body within her house hitherto. Homer Barron had become too interwoven with the embodiment of the South's prejudice and perished. By revealing this story element, Faulkner conveys the message that getting too close to the beliefs of the old South can be detrimental, even if you do not practice
He also shows the relationship between Emily and her dead father and how Emily cannot let go of people that show a love interest in her or the people who look after her in that she must be attached to them even after death. Faulkner depicts an Emily that was once young and vibrant, who maintained the Grierson home and kept it in a pristine condition. Faulkner relays to readers that because Emily was unable to control her own destiny and was powerless under her father’s hand, she became a recluse and ultimately went into a downward spiral. After sensing and believing that her first real love will leave her, Emily purchases arsenic and it is believed that she will kill herself because there is no point in living if no one will love her
William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” critiques the American South Describing Emily’s vibrant life full of hope and buoyancy, later shrouded into the profound mystery, Faulkner emphasizes her denial to accept the concept of death. William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” takes place in the South during the transitional time period from the racial discrimination to the core political change of racial equality. Starting from the description of her death, “A Rose for Emily” tells the story about the lady who is the last in her generation (Emily Grierson). Being strong, proud and a traditional lady of southern aristocracy, Emily turns into an evil, unpredictable and mysterious old lady after the death of her father. Even though “A Rose for Emily”
Symbolism is one literary device Faulkner uses and has major importance to the story. One big symbol in the story is Emily’s house. For most of the townspeople they only saw the house from the outside in never the inside out. Faulkner gives a good description of the house by saying, “it was a big squarish frame house that once had been white, decorated with cupolas and spires and scrolled balconies in the heavily lightsome style of the seventies, set on
“A Rose for Emily” is a unique short story that keeps the reader guessing even though its first sentence already reveals the majority of the content. William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” is the epitome of a work that follows an unconventional plot structure and a non-linear timeline, but this method of organization is intentional, as it creates suspense throughout the story. William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” follows an unusual plot structure, which creates an eccentric application of suspense to a short story. Throughout the story, there are no clear indications of standard plot structure in each section, such as intro, climax, and denouement. Instead, there are sections, which are not in chronological order, that describe a particular conflict or event, which in turn creates suspense, as each conflict builds upon each other to make the reader question the overall context and organization of the story.
Miss Emily, who represents a “monument” to the townspeople, is a member of the Grierson family, who are wealthy and highly respected. She is a traditionalist throughout the story, and does not progress or modernize. Even when she finds herself falling into poverty she still manages to retain her aristocratic manner, and when the town felt as though she was a “hereditary obligation upon” them Miss Emily still would not “have accepted charity”. “As the last Grierson” Miss Emily upholds her father’s wishes of not becoming romantically involved with anyone of a lower class, although the
To compare, Faulkner shares a slice of evidence as to why Emily has an uncontrollable obsession for the dead, “After her father 's death she went out very little; after her sweetheart went away, people hardly saw her at all.” (Faulkner) Given these points, her father becomes arrogant and isolates her from society, or anyone who is willing to take Miss Emily from him. When her father, the only man in the world who has loved her,