“A Rose for Emily” is a story that stands by itself. Faulkner himself modestly referred to it as a “ghost story,” but many critics recognize it as an extraordinarily versatile work. As Frank A. Littler writes in Notes on Mississippi Writers, ‘‘A Rose for Emily’’ has been ‘‘read variously as a Gothic horror tale, a study in abnormal psychology, an allegory of the relations between North and South, a meditation on the nature of time, and a tragedy with Emily as a sort of tragic heroine.’’See also Spark notes.
Questions I have for myself before class:
- Do I want students to look at the conclusions and ideas from past classes - or come up with an interpretation on their own - unbiased by previous readers?
- Should I have students compare the tale to a CSI or Law & Order episode? We've previously compared the meaning of the rose to a Bachelor / Bachelorette reality TV meaning. How would they react to a role play?
- Why did our text book place the student example of a literary analysis in front of the story itself?
- Did I warn them in advance of the inappropriate language (by today's standards)? Can or should we discuss it? They could see the same term in the middle stall of the 3rd floor LIB men's bathroom.
- When was the story set? Where? Describe the social context.
- Is it believable?
- What do we know about the narrator?
- What do we know or suspect about Homer Barron? anyone look it up? Here, or here(?)? What're your gut feelings about him?
- Was the writer intentionally using symbols and multiple layers of meaning?
- Do Homer and Emily seem like a good match?
- How do the town's people feel about Emily? How do you feel about her?
- What does Emily's reaction to the death of her father tell us about the way her mind works?
- What does the hair in the last sentence mean?
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