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ARoseforEmily-Sparknotes选注与评析-收集整理.pdf

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1、A Rose for Emily-SparknotesWilliam FaulknerPlot OverviewContextWilliam Faulkner was born in New Albany,Mississippi,in 1897.One of the twentieth centurys greatest writers,Faulkner earned his fame from a series of novels that explore the Souths historical legacy,its fraught and often tensely violent p

2、resent,and its uncertain future.This grouping of major works includes The Sound and the Fury(1929),As I Lay Dying(1930),Light in August(1931),and Absalom,Absalom!(1936),all of which are rooted in Faulkners fictional Mississippi county,Yoknapatawpha.This imaginary setting is a microcosm of the South

3、that Faulkner knew so well.It serves as a lens through which he could examine the practices,folkways,and attitudes that had divided and united the people of the South since the nations inception.In his writing,Faulkner was particularly interested in exploring the moral implications of history.As the

4、 South emerged from the Civil War and Reconstruction and attempted to shed the stigma of slavery,its residents were frequently torn between a new and an older,more established world order.Religion and politics frequently fail to provide order and guidance and instead complicate and divide.Society,wi

5、th its gossip,judgment,and harsh pronouncements,conspires to thwart the ambitions of individuals struggling to embrace their identities.Across Faulkners fictional landscapes,individual characters often stage epic struggles,prevented from realizing their potential or establishing their place in the w

6、orld.“A Rose for Emily”was the first short story that Faulkner published in a major magazine.It appeared in the April 30,1930,issue of Forum.Despite the earlier publication of several novels,when Faulkner published this story he was still struggling to make a name for himself in the United States.Fe

7、w critics recognized in his prose the hallmarks of a major new voice.Slightly revised versions of the story appeared in subsequent collections of Faulkners short fictionin These 13(1931)and then Collected Stories(1950)which helped to increase its visibility.Today,the much-anthologized story is among

8、 the most widely read and highly praised of Faulkners work.Beyond its lurid appeal and somewhat Gothic atmosphere,Faulkners“ghost story,”as he once called it,gestures to broader ideas,including the tensions between North and South,complexities of a changing world order,disappearing realms of gentili

9、ty and aristocracy,and rigid social constraints placed on women.Ultimately,it is the storys chilling portrait of aberrant psychology and necrophilia that draws readers into the dank,dusty world of Emily Grierson.Faulkner won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1949 and the Pulitzer Prize in both 1955 a

10、nd 1962.He died in Byhalia,Mississippi on July 6,1962,when he was sixty-four.Plot OverviewThe story is divided into five sections.In section I,the narrator recalls the time of Emily Griersons death and how the entire town attended her funeral in her home,which no stranger had entered for more than t

11、en years.In a once-elegant,upscale neighborhood,Emilys house is the last vestige of the grandeur of a lost era.Colonel Sartoris,the towns previous mayor,had suspended Emilys tax responsibilities to the town after her fathers death,justifying the action by claiming that Mr.Grierson had once lent the

12、community a significant sum.As new town leaders take over,they make unsuccessful attempts to get Emily to resume payments.When members of the Board of Aldermen pay her a visit,in the dusty and antiquated parlor,Emily reasserts the fact that she is not required to pay taxes in Jefferson and that the

13、officials should talk to Colonel Sartoris about the matter.However,at that point he has been dead for almost a decade.She asks her servant,Tobe,to show the men out.In section II,the narrator describes a time thirty years earlier when Emily resists another official inquiry on behalf of the town leade

14、rs,when the townspeople detect a powerful odor emanating from her property.Her father has just died,and Emily has been abandoned by the man whom the townsfolk believed Emily was to marry.As complaints mount,Judge Stevens,the mayor at the time,decides to have lime sprinkled along the foundation of th

15、e Grierson home in the middle of the night.Within a couple of weeks,the odor subsides,but the townspeople begin to pity the increasingly reclusive Emily,remembering how her great aunt had succumbed to insanity.The townspeople have always believed that the Griersons thought too highly of themselves,w

16、ith Emilys father driving off the many suitors deemed not good enough to marry his daughter.With no offer of marriage in sight,Emily is still single by the time she turns thirty.The day after Mr.Griersons death,the women of the town call on Emily to offer their condolences.Meeting them at the door,E

17、mily states that her father is not dead,a charade that she keeps up for three days.She finally turns her fathers body over for burial.In section III,the narrator describes a long illness that Emily suffers after this incident.The summer after her fathers death,the town contracts workers to pave the

18、sidewalks,and a construction company,under the direction of northerner Homer Barron,is awarded the job.Homer soon becomes a popular figure in town and is seen taking Emily on buggy rides on Sunday afternoons,which scandalizes the town and increases the condescension and pity they have for Emily.They

19、 feel that she is forgetting her family pride and becoming involved with a man beneath her station.As the affair continues and Emilys reputation is further compromised,she goes to the drug store to purchase arsenic,a powerful poison.She is required by law to reveal how she will use the arsenic.She o

20、ffers no explanation,and the package arrives at her house labeled“For rats.”In section IV,the narrator describes the fear that some of the townspeople have that Emily will use the poison to kill herself.Her potential marriage to Homer seems increasingly unlikely,despite their continued Sunday ritual

21、.The more outraged women of the town insist that the Baptist minister talk with Emily.After his visit,he never speaks of what happened and swears that hell never go back.So the ministers wife writes to Emilys two cousins in Alabama,who arrive for an extended stay.Because Emily orders a silver toilet

22、 set monogrammed with Homers initials,talk of the couples marriage resumes.Homer,absent from town,is believed to be preparing for Emilys move to the North or avoiding Emilys intrusive relatives.After the cousins departure,Homer enters the Grierson home one evening and then is never seen again.Holed

23、up in the house,Emily grows plump and gray.Despite the occasional lesson she gives in china painting,her door remains closed to outsiders.In what becomes an annual ritual,Emily refuses to acknowledge the tax bill.She eventually closes up the top floor of the house.Except for the occasional glimpse o

24、f her in the window,nothing is heard from her until her death at age seventy-four.Only the servant is seen going in and out of the house.In section V,the narrator describes what happens after Emily dies.Emilys body is laid out in the parlor,and the women,town elders,and two cousins attend the servic

25、e.After some time has passed,the door to a sealed upstairs room that had not been opened in forty years is broken down by the townspeople.The room is frozen in time,with the items for an upcoming wedding and a mans suit laid out.Homer Barrons body is stretched on the bed as well,in an advanced state

26、 of decay.The onlookers then notice the indentation of a head in the pillow beside Homers body and a long strand of Emilys gray hair on the pillow.Character ListEmily Grierson-The object of fascination in the story.A eccentric recluse,Emily is a mysterious figure who changes from a vibrant and hopef

27、ul young girl to a cloistered and secretive old woman.Devastated and alone after her fathers death,she is an object of pity for the townspeople.After a life of having potential suitors rejected by her father,she spends time after his death with a newcomer,Homer Barron,although the chances of his mar

28、rying her decrease as the years pass.Bloated and pallid in her later years,her hair turns steel gray.She ultimately poisons Homer and seals his corpse into an upstairs room.Read an in-depth analysis of Emily Grierson.Homer Barron-A foreman from the North.Homer is a large man with a dark complexion,a

29、 booming voice,and light-colored eyes.A gruff and demanding boss,he wins many admirers in Jefferson because of his gregarious nature and good sense of humor.He develops an interest in Emily and takes her for Sunday drives in a yellow-wheeled buggy.Despite his attributes,the townspeople view him as a

30、 poor,if not scandalous,choice for a mate.He disappears in Emilys house and decomposes in an attic bedroom after she kills him.Read an in-depth analysis of Homer Barron.Judge Stevens-A mayor of Jefferson.Eighty years old,Judge Stevens attempts to delicately handle the complaints about the smell eman

31、ating from the Grierson property.To be respectful of Emilys pride and former position in the community,he and the aldermen decide to sprinkle lime on the property in the middle of the night.Mr.Grierson-Emilys father.Mr.Grierson is a controlling,looming presence even in death,and the community clearl

32、y sees his lasting influence over Emily.He deliberately thwarts Emilys attempts to find a husband in order to keep her under his control.We get glimpses of him in the story:in the crayon portrait kept on the gilt-edged easel in the parlor,and silhouetted in the doorway,horsewhip in hand,having chase

33、d off another of Emilys suitors.Tobe-Emilys servant.Tobe,his voice supposedly rusty from lack of use,is the only lifeline that Emily has to the outside world.For years,he dutifully cares for her and tends to her needs.Eventually the townspeople stop grilling him for information about Emily.After Emi

34、lys death,he walks out the back door and never returns.Colonel Sartoris-A former mayor of Jefferson.Colonel Sartoris absolves Emily of any tax burden after the death of her father.His elaborate and benevolent gesture is not heeded by the succeeding generation of town leaders.Analysis of Major Charac

35、tersEmily GriersonEmily is the classic outsider,controlling and limiting the towns access to her true identity by remaining hidden.The house that shields Emily from the world suggests the mind of the woman who inhabits it:shuttered,dusty,and dark.The object of the towns intense scrutiny,Emily is a m

36、uted and mysterious figure.On one level,she exhibits the qualities of the stereotypical southern“eccentric”:unbalanced,excessively tragic,and subject to bizarre behavior.Emily enforces her own sense of law and conduct,such as when she refuses to pay her taxes or state her purpose for buying the pois

37、on.Emily also skirts the law when she refuses to have numbers attached to her house when federal mail service is instituted.Her dismissal of the law eventually takes on more sinister consequences,as she takes the life of the man whom she refuses to allow to abandon her.The narrator portrays Emily as

38、 a monument,but at the same time she is pitied and often irritating,demanding to live life on her own terms.The subject of gossip and speculation,the townspeople cluck their tongues at the fact that she accepts Homers attentions with no firm wedding plans.After she purchases the poison,the townspeop

39、le conclude that she will kill herself.Emilys instabilities,however,lead her in a different direction,and the final scene of the story suggests that she is a necrophiliac.Necrophilia typically means a sexual attraction to dead bodies.In a broader sense,the term also describes a powerful desire to co

40、ntrol another,usually in the context of a romantic or deeply personal relationship.Necrophiliacs tend to be so controlling in their relationships that they ultimately resort to bonding with unresponsive entities with no resistance or willin other words,with dead bodies.Mr.Grierson controlled Emily,a

41、nd after his death,Emily temporarily controls him by refusing to give up his dead body.She ultimately transfers this control to Homer,the object of her affection.Unable to find a traditional way to express her desire to possess Homer,Emily takes his life to achieve total power over him.Homer BarronH

42、omer,much like Emily,is an outsider,a stranger in town who becomes the subject of gossip.Unlike Emily,however,Homer swoops into town brimming with charm,and he initially becomes the center of attention and the object of affection.Some townspeople distrust him because he is both a Northerner and day

43、laborer,and his Sunday outings with Emily are in many ways scandalous,because the townspeople regard Emilydespite her eccentricitiesas being from a higher social class.Homers failure to properly court and marry Emily prompts speculation and suspicion.He carouses with younger men at the Elks Club,and

44、 the narrator portrays him as either a homosexual or simply an eternal bachelor,dedicated to his single status and uninterested in marriage.Homer says only that he is“not a marrying man.”As the foreman of a company that has arrived in town to pave the sidewalks,Homer is an emblem of the North and th

45、e changes that grip the once insular and genteel world of the South.With his machinery,Homer represents modernity and industrialization,the force of progress that is upending traditional values and provoking resistance and alarm among traditionalists.Homer brings innovation to the rapidly changing w

46、orld of this Southern town,whose new leaders are themselves pursuing more“modern”ideas.The change that Homer brings to Emilys life,as her first real lover,is equally as profound and seals his grim fate as the victim of her plan to keep him permanently by her side.Themes,Motifs,and SymbolsThemesTradi

47、tion versus ChangeThrough the mysterious figure of Emily Grierson,Faulkner conveys the struggle that comes from trying to maintain tradition in the face of widespread,radical change.Jefferson is at a crossroads,embracing a modern,more commercial future while still perched on the edge of the past,fro

48、m the faded glory of the Grierson home to the town cemetery where anonymous Civil War soldiers have been laid to rest.Emily herself is a tradition,steadfastly staying the same over the years despite many changes in her community.She is in many ways a mixed blessing.As a living monument to the past,s

49、he represents the traditions that people wish to respect and honor;however,she is also a burden and entirely cut off from the outside world,nursing eccentricities that others cannot understand.Emily lives in a timeless vacuum and world of her own making.Refusing to have metallic numbers affixed to t

50、he side of her house when the town receives modern mail service,she is out of touch with the reality that constantly threatens to break through her carefully sealed perimeters.Garages and cotton gins have replaced the grand antebellum homes.The aldermen try to break with the unofficial agreement abo

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