Analysis Of As I Lay Dying By William Faulkner
Before you were born, there came a time where your parents had to make a decision regarding what they were going to name you. It was a lot of pressure knowing that this name would be one that people knew you by, and it would be your title for the rest of your life. They could have chosen a name that had a special ring to it, one that reminded them of something in the past. They could've named you after an important family member as a way to honor them. Perhaps they could've named you because there was a deeper meaning behind the letters. The father of the novel As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner, had the same perspectives as your parents when choosing a name to represent each character: Addie, Anse, Darl, Jewel, Cash, Dewey Dell, and Vardaman. The names Faulkner uses to represent his characters and unravel a deeper understanding than just print on the paper, but rather the "indication of qualities" (Foster 105) and the truth behind who one really is. Let's start out with the family name–Bundren. If you switch a few letters around, readers often make the connection that it sounds like "burden". The Bundren bunch face many obstacles throughout their journey through the Mississippi countryside. The burden of poverty strikes the family resulting in little funds to keep the family upright. The youngest son, Vardaman, makes this realization when he is in town looking in a shop window full of toys and recognizes rural boys like himself can't have such things. Along with
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