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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. While Faulkner may be fair to his women characters in the context of his quest to portray realism, he does not go too far beyond that stringent barrier to flesh out a greater depth so they may escape the ever-present typecast existence they portray in Light in August. Both Lena Grove and Joanna Burden, for example, reflect women who – by virtue of a male dominated society punctuated with racial overtones – are wholly dependent upon men for their existence, no matter how paltry that may be. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFaulkLight.rtf
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that stringent barrier to flesh out a greater depth so they may escape the ever-present typecast existence they portray in Light in August. Both Lena Grove and Joanna Burden,
for example, reflect women who - by virtue of a male dominated society punctuated with racial overtones - are wholly dependent upon men for their existence, no matter how paltry
that may be. Lenas simplistic nature comprised of innocence and survival casts her as a woman who must have a man in her life in order to be considered
whole. Her extraordinarily long journey to locate the father of her unborn child brings her directly into the path of yet another man who betrays her trust by withholding
information about the whereabouts of the babys father. Lenas trusting disposition - a flaw of sorts that prevents her from suspecting Byron of concealing what he knows - is
one of the most obvious indicators of how Faulkner reserves a greater depth of character for his males. Similarly, Joanna - while stronger than Lena - still does not possess
the intestinal fortitude inherent to passionate, powerful women. She does stand apart from the other townspeople in her quest to perpetuate the spirit of her brother and grandfathers abolitionist
movement, however, this attempt is only an extension of what two strong men before her had accomplished. Neither women has much of a sense of identity beyond each ones myopic
scope of existence, an absence of identity that equates to the loss of self in their respective worlds. Faulkners words are instrumental in effectuating the significant absence of self-image
so commonplace in poor black communities, particularly when women have no voice in a vastly patriarchal society. Very little in their lives acts as a catharsis in allowing either
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