“A Rose for Emily” By William Faulkner
Prepared by: Abdujalilov Ma'murjon
PLOT Exposition: - Initial equilibrium
- complication (Homer)
- Setting
-Small town
-South
-late 1800s, early 1900s
-Miss Emily’s house
Exposition
Conflict
Climax
Resolution
3. Characterization (What are the characters like? Protagonist/Antagonist? Flat/Round? Static/Dynamic? Stock?) -Miss Emily Grierson -Miss Emily’s father -Homer Barron -townspeople -the Negro -the cousins Conflict ( Man vs. Man; Man vs. Himself; Man vs. Nature; Man vs. Society; Man vs. Supernatural )
-Miss Emily vs. her father
-Miss Emily vs. herself
-Miss Emily vs. Homer
-Miss Emily vs. townspeople/cousins
Climax (The point of the story where the main conflict is resolved.)
-Miss Emily dies.
Resolution (What does the reader learn after the climax?) - The room is opened.
- Homer’s body is discovered.
- The townspeople put all the clues together.
- What is the “rose” for Emily?
POINT OF VIEW - “When Miss Emily died, our whole town went to her funeral. . . .” -First person minor character, participant, unreliable
1) 1st person Character (major/minor? participant? reliable?)
2) 3rd person Narrator (omniscient/limited/objective)
TONE - Conversational, gossipy.
- Mysterious
- Bizarre, strange
- Grotesque
- Southern Gothic
STYLE Long, complicated sentences. (See ¶ 1) -interruptions -big, bookish words (coquettish, ¶ 2) - Lots of description. (See ¶ 6)
- Flashbacks. (See ¶ 3)
- Not much dialog.
(The way the author tells the story.)
THEME (What general idea or insight does the entire story reveal? Must be stated in general words & must apply to society in general and not just this story. May not state what the story is about.) - People may resort to desperate
measures to prevent being alone in life. - Things, people, and events are not
always what they appear to be. - Others?
SYMBOL (An object that suggests more than its literal meaning. An object that points or hints at deeper meaning. Always look at titles, inanimate objects, names, colors, and locales.) - The rose color?
- The title?
- The toiletry items?
- The pocket watch?
- The dust?
CRITIQUES - The plot’s order and time frame
- Southern Gothic genre
- Her father’s influence – his repression leads her to date a man he would not approve of and then take control in the only manner possible
- Necrophilia – she loved and slept with the dead. In what ways?
- Passage of time – Emily’s denial of it
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