Classics Without All the Class discussion

19 views
March 2014- Sound and the Fury > Chapter 2 - Quentin's Section

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 2: by Beth (new)

Beth (k9odyssey) Why does Faulkner choose to have Quentin narrate his own section, even though he has been dead for nearly eighteen years?

Why do you think Quentin is obsessed with time passage?

Why does he attempt to make, in a crucial conversation with his father, a confession of incest? Is it a false confession?

Given Quentin's state of mind at the time, what do you think of Mr. Compson's response to him?


back to top