Log24

Thursday, March 14, 2024

South Dakota Review:  Perlis on Faulkner

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 8:36 pm

"Alan Perlis also addresses the artist’s freezing of
time as he looks at As I Lay Dying He sees Darl as
an artist-figure who catches “action in the tension
of stopped-time” (104). Both critics link Faulkner to
John Keats, whose poetry often seeks immortality,
like that of an object such as a Grecian urn or an
Ozymandian monument. Perlis sums this up, saying
that Faulkner 'is an idealist in the manner of a Keats
or a Wallace Stevens, who ponder the paradoxical
nature of a conception that embodies action and the
passing of time in the rigid and timeless structure of
an art form.' "

The work cited:

Perlis, Alan D. “As I Lay Dying  as a Study of Time.”
South Dakota Review  10.1 (1972): 103-10

The source of the citation:

I SEE, HE SAYS, PERHAPS, ON TIME:
VISION, VOICE, HYPOTHETICAL NARRATION,
AND TEMPORALITY IN WILLIAM FAULKNER’S FICTION

*****
DISSERTATION
Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for
The Degree Doctor of Philosophy in
the Graduate School of The Ohio State University
By David S. FitzSimmons, B.A., M.A.

*****
The Ohio State University, 2003.


A search in this  journal for Dakota yields the author Kathleen Norris.
See, for instance . . .

https://www.americamagazine.org/content/dispatches/
writing-death-and-monastic-wisdom-conversation-kathleen-norris
.

No Comments

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Powered by WordPress