Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Quentin Compson: Tyrrhenian Vase or Crucible of Race?
- 2 Absalom, Absalom!, Haiti, and Labor History: Reading Unreadable Revolutions
- 3 Absalom, Absalom! and Rosa Coldfield: Or, “What Is in the Dark House?”
- 4 The Persistence of Thomas Sutpen: Absalom, Absalom!, Time, and Labor Discipline
- 5 Forget Jerusalem, Go to Hollywood – “To Die. Yes. To Die?” (A Coda to Absalom, Absalom!)
- Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography of Works Cited
- Index
- Titles in the Series
1 - Quentin Compson: Tyrrhenian Vase or Crucible of Race?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Quentin Compson: Tyrrhenian Vase or Crucible of Race?
- 2 Absalom, Absalom!, Haiti, and Labor History: Reading Unreadable Revolutions
- 3 Absalom, Absalom! and Rosa Coldfield: Or, “What Is in the Dark House?”
- 4 The Persistence of Thomas Sutpen: Absalom, Absalom!, Time, and Labor Discipline
- 5 Forget Jerusalem, Go to Hollywood – “To Die. Yes. To Die?” (A Coda to Absalom, Absalom!)
- Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography of Works Cited
- Index
- Titles in the Series
Summary
Faulkner's post-publication statements about The Sound and the Fury swaddle the book in maidenheads: having shut his door on publishers, he “began to write about a little girl” and to “manufacture [a] sister.” In a further analogy for writing he cites the old Roman
who kept at his bedside a Tyrrhenian vase which he loved and the rim of which he wore slowly away with kissing it. I had made myself a vase, but I suppose I knew all the time that I could not live forever inside of it. …
The vase is a crackable euphemism; in Flags in the Dust (1927), the manuscript whose apparent rejection caused Faulkner to close his door, Horace Benbow makes a similar vessel. Having learned to blow glass in Venice, he manufactures “a small chaste shape … not four inches high, fragile as a silver lily and incomplete.” He calls the vase Narcissa, for his sister, and is anatomically concise about the source of his skills. Of Venetian glass workers, he notes:
They work in caves … down flights of stairs underground. You feel water seeping under your foot while you are reaching for the next step, and when you put your hand out to steady yourself against the wall, it's wet when you take it away. It feels just like blood.
Venice and vagina elide, even as vase and hymen cross.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fictions of LaborWilliam Faulkner and the South's Long Revolution, pp. 8 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997