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As I Lay Dying (Cliffs Notes) |
List Price: $5.99
Your Price: $5.39 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: i enjoyed this book Review: i love the way willian faulkner wrote this book,u get each characters own thoughts, and personal expierences of the adventure this family went through. In the begining of the book, i guess it was because theyre were so many diferent nerators, it was kind of confusing, and hard to get into. But as i progressed through the book i found myself not being able to put the book down in curiosity of what would lie before me in the folowing chapters. i dont read much but i enjoyed this book.
Rating: Summary: Hard 2 understand Review: I read this book for OAC english. It is very hard to understand when Darl Narrates. Other than that it is a well written novel. Knibb high football rules
Rating: Summary: Hard 2 understand Review: I read this book for OAC english. It is very hard to understand when Darl Narrates. Other than that it is a well written novel. Knibb high football rules
Rating: Summary: i didnt really like it. Review: I think that if you are into literature than you might like this book but I think that it wasnt as great as my professor said it was going to be
Rating: Summary: i enjoyed this book Review: I think this book fits well with Ernest Beckers Denial of Death. We have a survival instinct and yet know that we will die which leaves us motivated by a deep seated terror angst which energizes and controls all of life's activities. We deny death and try to transcend it through our symbol systems (e.g., a symbolic self which include regional ideals, cultural value and the vital lie of a personal hero myth which serve as prescriptions to immortality and elevated self-worth. "Life" follows from this and becomes, in a sense, a frantic preperation for death by building symbolic immortalities through empty verbalisms or divided or hypocritcal selves in which lies a deep fissure between words and deeds. All of this to deny our mortality. The problem is that this rigorous effort robs one of living a present-centered life and transcending narsism because of the relativity principle: My transcendance is relative to your lack of transcendance. Furthermore, we want to discount others experiences if they bring into question our own: We elevate like-others and consign different others to hell: Its the primal scene of politics. To engage in such perpetual holy wars inherently requires repression, ignorance, and oppression which is acheived to varying levels by most of the Bundrens, save Darl and perhaps Addie. Darl's tragedy is that he is not sufficiently repressed and thus he becomes a threat to the gatekeepers of morality (his kin) as he stands as a potential whistleblower to their vital lies. This pathetic condition - man's true story - is well illustrated in As I lay dieing - it shows that salvation is an illusion. Its efforts are merely filling in the lack of- trying to supplant no-thing with something; trying to transcend one's mortality by policing experience and oppressing others: We learn that filling void with contrived meanings tends to put men at odds with their environments, other people, and oneselve. Other works that help elucidate "As I lay dieing:" R. D. Laings "politics of experience" and Joseph Campbell's "Hero with a thousand faces." Think long and hard about this one and enjoy its wonderful character development and labyrinthine plot.
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