An examination of how Faulkner's work has been analyzed, elucidated, and
promoted by a massive body of scholarly work spanning over seven
decades.
William Faulkner seems to have sprung a full-blown genius from a remote
part of the American South. Yet Faulkner spent much of his life striving
to emulate and overshadow - both as a writer and as a person - his
great-grandfatherand namesake, Colonel William Falkner, a dueling,
railroad-building, soldiering figure who loomed not just as a legend in
Faulkner's family and community but also as a literary forebear, a
published novelist, travel writer, and poet. Looking back on his career,
Faulkner would mention that early on he had ridden his
great-grandfather's coattails, but by the mid-twentieth century it was
clear that it was the great-grandson who was leading the literary world:
readers, young writers of fiction, and literary critics were following
him as one who had found extraordinary ways to capture and express the
most challenging aspects of modern life. Taylor Hagood's book centers on
the concept of following to examine how Faulkner's work has been
analyzed, elucidated, and promoted by a massive body of scholarly work
spanning over seven decades. It narrates the development of Faulkner
criticism, taking as its premisethe idea that Faulkner forges a fiery
path through modernism and into postmodernism that literary critics have
been constantly rushing to follow.
Taylor Hagood is Associate Professor of English at Florida Atlantic
University. His book Faulkner: Writer of Disability (LSU Press, 2014)
won the C. Hugh Holman Award for Best Book in Southern Literary Studies
in 2015.