现代大学英语精读六(第二版) 教师用书Unit 2.docx
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1、Unit 2 A Rose for Emily William Faulkner Additional Background Information on William Faulkner William Faulkner was born and brought up in the American South and lived there for almost all his life. On November 14, 1888, the local newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi reported a news story: “A terrible
2、tragedy was enacted at Ripley on Tuesday afternoon of last weekthe widely and well-known Col. W. C. Falkner being the victim.” Col. Falkner had run for the Mississippi legislature and had been elected. But before he took office he was shot dead by his rival. Col. Falkner had been a local hero and a
3、legendary figure. He was a pioneer in Mississippi, organized a regiment to fight for the South in the Civil War, practiced law after returning from the battlefields, bought a large plantation, built the first railroad in his hometown, and wrote a novel, which became a national best-seller. This “wid
4、ely and well-known” Col. W. C. Falkner was William Faulkners great-grandfather. On September 25, 1897, Faulkner was born in this distinguished family. He spent his youth in Oxford, a small town in Mississippi. Although the old colonel had died before Faulkner came into this world, the boy grew up li
5、stening to all sorts of stories about his great-grandfather and other people in his hometown. The stories that his Negro nanny told him and the gossip he heard from the townspeople resting and chatting in the small downtown square provided Faulkner with an oral tradition of storytelling as an import
6、ant part of his education. During World War I Faulkner served in the Royal Canadian Air Force. After the armistice in 1918 he returned to Oxford, and for some time he led his life in a rather listless way. He attended the University of Mississippi but left the university within a year; he tried his
7、hand at poetry but without much success; he went north to the cultural metropolitan city of New York, but was driven back home soon by loneliness. He became a postmaster, but after three years at most, he resigned from this post. All this time, Faulkner had been reading, first, whatever interested h
8、im, and, later, the great poets and novelists. In New York, Faulkner met Sherwood Anderson, a famous writer, and then when he traveled to New Orleans in 1925, he gained entry into this artistic center through Anderson. Inspired by Anderson, Faulkner began to write novels. Faulkner wrote 19 novels an
9、d nearly a hundred short stories. The setting of 15 novels and the majority of the short fiction is the American South. In his third book Sartoris (1929), he created the fictional Yoknapatawpha County. In the same year, he published The Sound and the Fury (1929), one of his masterpieces. This novel
10、owes much to James Joyce and the stream of consciousness technique. In another major work As I Lay Dying (1930), Faulkner relates a terrifying comic story to a ritualized burial journey. In this novel he experiments with multiple-point-of-view narration. Light in August (1932) is also one of Faulkne
11、rs major novels. The high point of Faulkners development is the brilliant Absalom, Absalom! (1936). His other major works include The Unvanquished, The Wild Palms, The Hamlet, The Town, The Mansion, Go Down Moses, A Fable, etc. As the setting of most of his works is the American South, Faulkner is r
12、egarded as a regional writer. But the word “regional” is misleading because Faulkner deals with some of the major universal themes in literature so profoundly that his work is read and recognized nationally and internationally. As far as writing techniques are concerned, Faulkner is among the great
13、experimentalists of the 20th century novel. His effective use of stream of consciousness, multiple points of view, symbolism and imagery, places him among the rank of outstanding modern writers along with James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. In 1950, Faulkner won the Nobel Prize for Literature. The Theme
14、s and Writing Techniques of “A Rose for Emily” Although “A Rose for Emily” is one of his most frequently anthologized short stories and is widely used in the American classroom, Chinese students may find it difficult to understand and appreciate. Some of them may think it is a bizarre story about an
15、 old eccentric lady in an American Southern town. Its true that the setting of the story is the American South. Yet, the theme of the story is universal, transcending the boundaries of time and space. Like many other works of great literature, this short story tells about love, death, honor, pride,
16、change, and loss. In “A Rose for Emily” we can see how the author tells the good story skillfully; how he creates the requisite atmosphere for telling the story; how he maintains the suspense and unfolds the conflict bit by bit; and how he digs deep into the social world of his characters. This stor
17、y is a rich and modern 20th-century literary text. Those who are not very familiar with modern American literature may therefore encounter obstacles in reading this story: vague references, ambiguities, symbolism, imagery, experimental point of view, jumbled time sequences, avoidance of clear transi
18、tions, withholding of vital information, etc. By exploiting those “tricks,” Faulkner hopes to invite readers to participate in the process of seeking the truths of the inner life of the characters in the story. Once we do, we will surely enjoy reading the story. Its like working at a puzzle: the mor
19、e parts we start to figure out, the more interesting the puzzle will become. The 1950 Nobel Prize presentation speech called Faulkner as the “unrivaled master of all living British and American novelists.” He is regarded as a “deep psychologist.” “A Rose for Emily” lives up to that high praise. Impl
20、icit Chronology (approximate) The narration of “A Rose for Emily” does not follow a normal chronological order. Instead, it shifts in time frequently and gives out bits of information about the main character, Miss Emily, in such a way that the reader has to piece them together by himself/herself. T
21、he following implicit chronology has been worked out on the basis of the information from the text. ca. 1855: Miss Emily was born to the richest family of slave-owners in the town. 1861: The American Civil War broke out; Confederate troops from the town were commanded by Col. Sartoris. 1865: The Ame
22、rican Civil War ended. 1870s: Mr. Grierson, Miss Emilys father, had the family house built in the Gothic revival style. ca. 1886: Mr. Grierson died; Miss Emilys inheritance was only the house; she was over thirty. ca. 1887: Homer Barron, Northern construction foreman, arrived; he and Miss Emily star
23、ted courting. ca. 1888: Homer Barron could be seen no more; the smell in the house was noticed. 1894: The Young Colonel Sartoris, as mayor of the town, exempted Miss Emily from taxes for life. ca. 1919: The Young Colonel died. ca. 1927-1928: The tax delegation visited Miss Emily. ca. 1929-1930: Miss
24、 Emily died at the age of 74. Notes: “ca.” is short for circa, meaning “about” used before an approximate date or figure. We must remember that Faulkner is not always accurate about the exact time of a certain event. The purpose of working out this chronology is to give students a rough idea of the
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