so vast, so limitless in capacity is man’s imagination to disperse and burn away the rubble dross of fact and probability, leaving only truth and dream — William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun Grammar purists may quibble with much of William Faulkner’s writing. Tightly composed and editorially pruned it is not. It is, however, undeniably [...]
Archive Content by Tag ‘Southern identity’
10/27/11 William Faulkner and BURNAWAY: Three Years of Inspiration
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Tags: As I Lay Dying, Atlanta, burn away, BURNAWAY, Civil War, cliches, cyclical time, eternal return, Faulkner, Faulkner Portable, Gary Bridgman, Georgia, globalism v. regionalism v. localism, identity, Jefferson, Latin, location and the public sphere, Mississippi, New South, Noplaceness, Old South, online magazine, oroboros, Oxford, phoenix, Portable Faulkner, publication, Requiem for a Nun, resurgens, rise again, rise forever, rise never, rubble dross, sense of place, sound and fury, Southern identity, Southernness, Southside Gallery, Spanish moss, stereotypes, the internet, The Jail, The Sound and the Fury, the web, timelessness, trial, Troy Davis, truth and dream, uroboros, William Faukner, Yoknapatawpha
































karley: nice!
Jared: Excited for the Bowman collection. She is someone to keep an eye on
ruth: What do you do with difficult lines of memory? Fold them into a san
Beth Lilly: I know! That's exactly the type of work I had in mind with the call f
Jason Francisco: Davis' bulletin boards seem to me actually to be photographs themselve