Combining explications of William Faulkner's novels and short stories with thematic analysis, Hyatt H. Waggoner works from the close reading of a specific work outward to its most general meanings and relationships. By this method he has made a significant contribution to the understanding of Faulkner's career and artistic achievement.
Waggoner examines both better and lesser-known works, which yield valuable insights into Faulkner's development when treated in relation to his whole body of work. The author also addresses the major themes which emerge from critical analyses of individual works: Faulkner's uneasy relationship with his Christian background and his unchanging conception of the role of the artist related to his changing practice as a writer. Waggoner concludes that Faulkner's artistic career reflects a creatively productive, but tortured and ambiguous, relationship with his community.
Chapter 1. Explorations: Soldier’s Pay; Mosquitoes
Chapter 2. Apprenticeship: Sartoris
Chapter 3. “Form, Solidity, Color”: The Sound and the Fury
Chapter 4. Vision: As I Lay Dying
Chapter 5. Outrage and Compassion: Sanctuary; Light in August
Chapter 6. New World: Pylon; The Wild Palms
Chapter 7. Past as Present: Absalom, Absalom!
Chapter 8. Present as Past: The Unvanquished; The Hamlet
Chapter 9. Tragic, Comic, and Threshold: The Short Stories
Chapter 10. The Artist as Moralist: Intruder in the Dust; Requiem for a Nun; A Fable; The Town
Chapter 11. “A Passion Week of the Heart”
Chapter 12. “From Jefferson to the World”