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The Southern Labyrinth: Faulkner’s Layers of Storytelling in Chapter 6 of Absalom, Absalom! Video 3 With Larry Allums

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Manage episode 516822396 series 3629380
Content provided by Lori Feathers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lori Feathers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Big Book Project, host Lori Feathers and literary scholar Dr. Larry Allums continue their deep exploration of William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!—turning to the enigmatic and multi-layered Chapter 6.

This chapter introduces a new voice into Faulkner’s intricate web of narrators: Shreve McCannon, Quentin Compson’s Canadian roommate at Harvard. Lori and Larry discuss how Faulkner weaves Shreve into the novel’s chorus of storytellers and how this outsider’s perspective both contrasts and transforms as he becomes absorbed in the haunting saga of Thomas Sutpen.

Their conversation delves into the chapter’s dizzying narrative structure—its use of italics, parentheses, and shifting points of view—and the profound questions it raises about race, family, innocence, and inherited guilt. They also examine Faulkner’s portrayal of characters like Clytie, Judith, Charles Bon, and Sutpen himself, and how the themes of lineage and identity echo through generations.

As Lori notes, reading Absalom, Absalom! feels like piecing together a vast jigsaw puzzle—frustrating, dazzling, and endlessly rewarding.

Listen to this episode to explore:

  • Why Faulkner introduces Shreve in Chapter 6 and what his voice adds
  • The evolving narration and blurred lines between storytellers
  • The moral and racial complexities surrounding the Sutpen family
  • The concept of “innocence” in Faulkner’s modern world
  • How memory, myth, and history intertwine in Southern storytelling

⏱️ Chapters

00:00 – Introduction and recap of Absalom, Absalom!
02:15 – Welcoming Dr. Larry Allums back to discuss Chapter 6
04:05 – The arrival of Shreve McCannon: a new narrator enters
07:40 – Faulkner’s use of multiple voices and shifting narration
10:55 – Why Faulkner gives Shreve an outsider’s Canadian perspective
14:20 – Quentin and Shreve’s dynamic: skepticism vs. obsession
18:10 – Revisiting Sutpen’s Hundred after 43 years
21:00 – Deaths, births, and the letter announcing Rosa’s passing
24:45 – Understanding Charles Bon and questions of race
29:30 – Thomas Sutpen’s suspicions and the “design” of his life
34:20 – Innocence, guilt, and the Southern moral code
39:00 – Judith and Clytie’s shared loyalty and quiet defiance
44:30 – The role of New Orleans and the octaroon society
48:15 – Charles Bon Jr.’s identity struggle and racial ambiguity
52:40 – Family lineage, belonging, and Faulkner’s concept of “passing”
56:25 – The haunting of Sutpen’s legacy across generations
59:10 – Faulkner’s use of italics and parentheses in Chapter 6
1:02:30 – The mystery of the cemetery and Judith’s epitaph
1:06:00 – Memory, inheritance, and the Southern sense of place
1:09:10 – Shreve’s humor and levity amid tragedy
1:12:00 – The brilliance of Faulkner’s narrative control
1:14:45 – Closing thoughts and preview of Chapter 7

🗣️ Join the Conversation

If you’re reading along, I’d love to know:
💬 What struck you most about these chapters?Share your thoughts in the comments so we can read and wrestle with Faulkner together.

✨ Follow The Big Book Project

  continue reading

21 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 516822396 series 3629380
Content provided by Lori Feathers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lori Feathers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Big Book Project, host Lori Feathers and literary scholar Dr. Larry Allums continue their deep exploration of William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!—turning to the enigmatic and multi-layered Chapter 6.

This chapter introduces a new voice into Faulkner’s intricate web of narrators: Shreve McCannon, Quentin Compson’s Canadian roommate at Harvard. Lori and Larry discuss how Faulkner weaves Shreve into the novel’s chorus of storytellers and how this outsider’s perspective both contrasts and transforms as he becomes absorbed in the haunting saga of Thomas Sutpen.

Their conversation delves into the chapter’s dizzying narrative structure—its use of italics, parentheses, and shifting points of view—and the profound questions it raises about race, family, innocence, and inherited guilt. They also examine Faulkner’s portrayal of characters like Clytie, Judith, Charles Bon, and Sutpen himself, and how the themes of lineage and identity echo through generations.

As Lori notes, reading Absalom, Absalom! feels like piecing together a vast jigsaw puzzle—frustrating, dazzling, and endlessly rewarding.

Listen to this episode to explore:

  • Why Faulkner introduces Shreve in Chapter 6 and what his voice adds
  • The evolving narration and blurred lines between storytellers
  • The moral and racial complexities surrounding the Sutpen family
  • The concept of “innocence” in Faulkner’s modern world
  • How memory, myth, and history intertwine in Southern storytelling

⏱️ Chapters

00:00 – Introduction and recap of Absalom, Absalom!
02:15 – Welcoming Dr. Larry Allums back to discuss Chapter 6
04:05 – The arrival of Shreve McCannon: a new narrator enters
07:40 – Faulkner’s use of multiple voices and shifting narration
10:55 – Why Faulkner gives Shreve an outsider’s Canadian perspective
14:20 – Quentin and Shreve’s dynamic: skepticism vs. obsession
18:10 – Revisiting Sutpen’s Hundred after 43 years
21:00 – Deaths, births, and the letter announcing Rosa’s passing
24:45 – Understanding Charles Bon and questions of race
29:30 – Thomas Sutpen’s suspicions and the “design” of his life
34:20 – Innocence, guilt, and the Southern moral code
39:00 – Judith and Clytie’s shared loyalty and quiet defiance
44:30 – The role of New Orleans and the octaroon society
48:15 – Charles Bon Jr.’s identity struggle and racial ambiguity
52:40 – Family lineage, belonging, and Faulkner’s concept of “passing”
56:25 – The haunting of Sutpen’s legacy across generations
59:10 – Faulkner’s use of italics and parentheses in Chapter 6
1:02:30 – The mystery of the cemetery and Judith’s epitaph
1:06:00 – Memory, inheritance, and the Southern sense of place
1:09:10 – Shreve’s humor and levity amid tragedy
1:12:00 – The brilliance of Faulkner’s narrative control
1:14:45 – Closing thoughts and preview of Chapter 7

🗣️ Join the Conversation

If you’re reading along, I’d love to know:
💬 What struck you most about these chapters?Share your thoughts in the comments so we can read and wrestle with Faulkner together.

✨ Follow The Big Book Project

  continue reading

21 episodes

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