I am so glad we had this seminar today! It put so many things that were just seeming like "sound and fury" to me, into place. Speaking of which, I absolutely LOVED the comment Truman made discussing how the "sound", in "The Sound and Fury", related to Benjy's relentless moaning for Caddy, and the "fury" is Jason's reactions to the events. Another comment I thought was clever was the one about the true power in the family. After reading the whole book, one might still think the power remains in the hands of Jason, but really the main figure here is Dilsey. She is the one who is trying her best to keep the family from suspending even further down the rabbit hole. One may automatically assume all the power resolves in Jason, but it is his drastic reactions that stand out to the reader- only leaving them to assume the phrase, "actions speak louder than words", to be true in this case. Jason's drastic measures to take care of the family boil down to the benefit of himself, making the draining noise contributing to the sound and fury, distracting the reader from the true position of power: Dilsey. Overall, this novel took me out of my reading comfort zone...at times it was hard to read and constantly frustrating me due to the abstract the structure of the text was. Despite the rough form of the text, this is what makes a good and even better writer: stepping into the uncomfortable and unknown.
Growing readers, such as us high school students, are what I like to calll, "butterfly catchers". Each time we read a new novel that is so abstract yet comphrensive like Faulkner's it is another story to weave in our reading journey. I imagine it as stepping out of a box to find yourself in a whole other world with butterflies and adventures you've never even seen before. As you continue to read, you find each butterfly encountered has a unique pattern; you study it, then let it go for others to capture. I have never read a book that was as frustrating yet astounding at the same time in a sense that Faulkner's was. Through out the whole novel, Faulkner was breaking boundaries in literature that I didn't know could be broken, therefore like a butterfly catcher seeing a completely new, unique insect for their collection they never knew existed.