<p><br />Contributions by Deborah N. Cohn Leigh Anne Duck Robert W. Hamblin Michael Kreyling Barbara Ladd Walter Benn Michaels Patrick O&#39;Donnell Theresa M. Towner Annette Trefzer and Karl F. Zender<br /><br /><em>Faulkner in the Twenty-First Century</em> presents the thoughts of ten noted Faulkner scholars who spoke at the twenty-seventh annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference at the University of Mississippi. Theresa M. Towner attacks the traditional classification of Faulkner&#39;s works as &quot;major&quot; and &quot;minor&quot; and argues that this causes the neglect of other significant works and characters. Michael Kreyling uses photographs of Faulkner to analyze the interrelationships of Faulkner&#39;s texts with the politics and culture of Mississippi.<br /><br />Barbara Ladd and Deborah Cohn invoke the relevance of Faulkner&#39;s works to &quot;the other South&quot; postcolonial Latin America. Also approaching Faulkner from a postcolonial perspective Annette Trefzer looks at his contradictory treatment of Native Americans.<br /><br />Within the tragic fates of such characters as Quentin Compson Gail Hightower and Rosa Coldfield Leigh Ann Duck finds an inability to cope with painful memories. Patrick O&#39;Donnell examines the use of the future tense and Faulkner&#39;s growing skepticism of history as a linear progression. To postmodern critics who denigrate &quot;The Fire and the Hearth&quot; Karl F. Zender offers a rebuttal. Walter Benn Michaels contends that in Faulkner&#39;s South and indeed the United States as a whole the question of racial identification tends to overpower all other issues. Faulkner&#39;s recurring interest in frontier life and values inspires Robert W. Hamblin&#39;s piece.</p>
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