Difference between revisions of "Reconstruction:As I Lay Dying"
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''As I Lay Dying'' opens with Darl as the point-of-view character. Early on, it is established that Darl can {{def|distance}} himself from even himself. | ''As I Lay Dying'' opens with Darl as the point-of-view character. Early on, it is established that Darl can {{def|distance}} himself from even himself. | ||
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The end of his chapter is marked by a {{def|rythmic}} {{def|repetition}} of the noise | The end of his chapter is marked by a {{def|rythmic}} {{def|repetition}} of the noise his brother Cash makes while building a coffin: | ||
{{quote|Addie Bundren could not want a better box to lie in. It will give her confidence and comfort. I go on to the house, followed by the '''Chuck Chuck Chuck''' of the adze. | {{quote|Addie Bundren could not want a better box to lie in. It will give her confidence and comfort. I go on to the house, followed by the '''Chuck Chuck Chuck''' of the adze. | ||
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His chapters show a recurring {{def|familial {{ref|enumeration}}|familial}} | His chapters show a recurring {{def|familial {{ref|enumeration}}|familial}} first introduced alongside a {{def|transformation}} of the mother Addie Bundren: | ||
{{quote|It was not her because it was laying right yonder in the dirt. And now it’s all chopped up. I chopped it up. It’s laying in the kitchen in the bleeding pan, waiting to be cooked and et. Then it wasn’t and she was, and now it is and she wasn’t. And tomorrow it will be cooked and '''she will be him and pa and Cash and Dewey Dell''' and there won’t be anything in the box and so she can breathe. | {{quote|It was not her because it was laying right yonder in the dirt. And now it’s all chopped up. I chopped it up. It’s laying in the kitchen in the bleeding pan, waiting to be cooked and et. Then it wasn’t and she was, and now it is and she wasn’t. And tomorrow it will be cooked and '''she will be him and pa and Cash and Dewey Dell''' and there won’t be anything in the box and so she can breathe. | ||
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}} | }} | ||
While the family moves the coffin to town, Cash mentions its {{def|balance}} (which is quite ironic considering his background story includes him falling from a roof and breaking a leg): | While the family moves the coffin to town, Cash mentions several times its {{def|balance}} (which is quite ironic considering his background story includes him falling from a roof and breaking a leg): | ||
{{quote|“It won’t '''balance'''. If you want it to tote and ride on a '''balance''', we will have—” | {{quote|“It won’t '''balance'''. If you want it to tote and ride on a '''balance''', we will have—” | ||
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Cash’s {{ref|balancing|balance}} {{def|relativizes}} Darl’s doings through his {{ref|distancing|distance}}: | |||
{{quote|Because there ain’t nothing justifies the deliberate destruction of what a man has built with his own sweat and stored the fruit of his sweat into. | {{quote|Because there ain’t nothing justifies the deliberate destruction of what a man has built with his own sweat and stored the fruit of his sweat into. | ||
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}} | }} | ||
Vardaman expresses a {{ref|phrasal {{ref|repetition}}|phrasal}} involving Darl after the latter | Vardaman expresses a {{ref|phrasal {{ref|repetition}}|phrasal}} involving Darl after the latter is arrested: | ||
{{quote|''He had to get on the train to go to Jackson. I have not been on the train, but Darl has been on the train. Darl. Darl is my brother. '''Darl, Darl''''' | {{quote|''He had to get on the train to go to Jackson. I have not been on the train, but Darl has been on the train. Darl. Darl is my brother. '''Darl, Darl''''' | ||
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}} | }} | ||
The latter quote directly transitions into a Darl chapter where Darl {{ref|repeats|repetition}} not only his own name, but also the {{ref|phrasal {{ref|repetition}}|phrasal}}, achieving a {{def|{{ref|relativized}} {{ref|repetition}}|relativized}}: | The latter quote directly transitions into a Darl chapter where Darl {{ref|repeats|repetition}} not only his own name, but also the {{ref|phrasal {{ref|repetition}}|phrasal}}, achieving a {{def|{{ref|relativized}} {{ref|repetition}}|relativized}} of his name: | ||
{{quote|'''Darl''' has gone to Jackson. They put '''him''' on the train, laughing, down the long car laughing, the heads turning like the heads of owls when he passed. […] | {{quote|'''Darl''' has gone to Jackson. They put '''him''' on the train, laughing, down the long car laughing, the heads turning like the heads of owls when he passed. […] | ||
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}} | }} | ||
At the end of the last chapter, Cash expresses a {{ref|{{ref|relativized}} {{ref|repetition}}|relativized}} | At the end of the last chapter, Cash expresses a {{ref|{{ref|relativized}} {{ref|repetition}}|relativized}} with the {{def|explicitly}} {{ref|relativized}} {{def|expression}} “this world is not '''his''' world; this life '''his''' life:” | ||
{{quote|Then we see it wasn’t the grip that made him look different; it was his face, and Jewel says, “He got them teeth.” | {{quote|Then we see it wasn’t the grip that made him look different; it was his face, and Jewel says, “He got them teeth.” | ||
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}} | }} | ||
This {{ref| | This {{ref|expression}} contrasts with a {{ref|repetition}} in the final line that follows, where a {{ref|familial {{ref|enumeration}}|familial}} implies an {{ref|arbitrary}} {{ref|transformation}} (from the deceased to the “duck-shaped woman”), with “Mrs Bundren” non-{{ref|explicitly}} {{ref|repeating|repetition}} Addie Bundren’s name: | ||
{{quote|“It’s '''Cash and Jewel and Vardaman and Dewey Dell''',” pa says, kind of hangdog and proud too, with his teeth and all, even if he wouldn’t look at us. “Meet '''Mrs Bundren''',” he says. | {{quote|“It’s '''Cash and Jewel and Vardaman and Dewey Dell''',” pa says, kind of hangdog and proud too, with his teeth and all, even if he wouldn’t look at us. “Meet '''Mrs Bundren''',” he says. |
Revision as of 21:52, 6 December 2021
As I Lay Dying opens with Darl as the point-of-view character. Early on, it is established that Darl can
himself from even himself.The end of his chapter is marked by a
of the noise his brother Cash makes while building a coffin:His brother Vardaman also shows in his chapters a
type of :“Cooked and et. Cooked and et.”
❞His chapters show a recurring
first introduced alongside a of the mother Addie Bundren:Darl confirms his
ability:How often have I lain beneath rain on a strange roof, thinking of home.
❞In a one-line Vardaman chapter, the
is completed.While the family moves the coffin to town, Cash mentions several times its
(which is quite ironic considering his background story includes him falling from a roof and breaking a leg):Addie Bundren has a monologue in her own chapter where she points out
words and names:Vardaman repeats his
while the family gets nearer to town. In particular, he uses the “X is my brother:”On their way, Vardaman spots something (presumably Darl trying to burn the coffin), and identifies him through
:Cash later tries to
what is right and what is wrong:Cash’s
Darl’s doings through his :But I ain’t so sho that ere a man has the right to say what is crazy and what ain’t. It’s like there was a fellow in every man that’s done a-past the sanity or the insanity, that watches the sane and the insane doings of that man with the same horror and the same astonishment.
❞Vardaman expresses a
involving Darl after the latter is arrested:The latter quote directly transitions into a Darl chapter where Darl
not only his own name, but also the , achieving a of his name:Darl is our brother, our brother Darl. Our brother Darl in a cage in Jackson where, his grimed hands lying light in the quiet interstices, looking out he foams.
“Yes yes yes yes yes yes yes yes”
❞At the end of the last chapter, Cash expresses a
with the “this world is not his world; this life his life:”It was a fact. It made him look a foot taller, kind of holding his head up, hangdog and proud too, and then we see her behind him, carrying the other grip—a kind of duck-shaped woman all dressed up, with them kind of hard-looking pop eyes like she was daring ere a man to say nothing. And then I see that the grip she was carrying was one of them little graphophones. It was for a fact, all shut up as pretty as a picture, and every time a new record would come from the mail order and us setting in the house in the winter, listening to it, I would think what a shame Darl couldn’t be to enjoy it too. But it is better so for him. This world is not his world; this life his life.
❞This
contrasts with a in the final line that follows, where a implies an (from the deceased to the “duck-shaped woman”), with “Mrs Bundren” non- Addie Bundren’s name: