http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
殷竹男 慶北大學校 人文大學 1987 인문학총 Vol.12 No.-
The purpose of this study is to investigate the characterizing function of the multiple-narrator technique in Absalom, Absalom! For the characterization of Thomas Sutpen in this novel, Faulkner neither describes nor interprets him but allows the four narrators, Rosa, Mr. Compson, Quentin, and Shreve, to say their different views of Sutpen. Rosa narrates Sutpen as a "demon," Mr. Compson, as a Greek hero, Quentin, as a representative of the South, and Shreve, as a "Faustus." The reader is required to put together these different views and form his own view of Sutpen that he is man of strong will, courage, and success, but at the same time he is amoral and inhumane enough to employ every means to achieve his "design." In the process of uniting the different views the reader actively participates in the world of the novel, and his final view of Sutpen is not partial or subjective but comprehensive and objective. While they tell about Sutpen and his sons, the narrators reveal themselves: Rosa is of romantic temperament, and she also represents a "Southern lady" a racist; Mr. Compson is a fatalist and cynic; Shreve is a romantic idealist; Quentin is a perceptive poet of ambivalent feelings of the South.
殷竹男 慶北大學校 人文大學 1985 인문학총 Vol.10 No.-
The purpose of this study is to investigate the technique of thematic presentation in William Faulkner's Snopes Trilogy, that is, The Hamlet, The Town, and The Mansion, centering on the multiple-narrator technique. This study has proceeded on the assumptions that, in Faulkner's novels in which the multiple-narrator is employed, the theme is objectified and reinforced and the reader is required to collaborate with the author. For the thematic presentation of Snopesism in The Town, three narrators, Charles, Gavin, and Ratliff, tell about Flem's meanness, wickedness and inhumanity. When they accumlatively recount Flem's identical wicked act and when they successively narrate Flem's different wicked acts, Flem's Snopesism assumes objective reinforcement. The three narrators of the Town accumlatively teel about Flem's wickendness to abuse the affair between his wife, Eula, and mayor Manfred in order to get the position of the superintendent of the electricity plant of the city and, later, to extort the presidency of the bank the president of which is Manfred. The narrators successively recount Flem's different wicked acts: Gavin criticizes Flem's animalism to abuse Linda, his daughter, in order to take Eula's inheritance and Linda's won; Ratliff reveals Flem's hypocrisy to write "A Virtuous wife" on Eula's tombstone after he himself drove her to suicide, and he also discloses Flem's inhumanity to abuse Montgomery to lengthen the prison term of Mink who was once his instrument; Charles censures Flem's meannes to embezzle half of the rewards for Hait's death and to evict other Snopeses of his competence in business from Jefferson. Besides theirs criticism of Flem's wickdness, the three narrators also tell about Eck and Wall who are courageous, honest, and self-sacrificing in contrast with Flem. In consequence Flem's Snopesism is reinforced more effectively. In this novel, the reader is asked to collect and unite the narrators' dispersed information of Flem's Snopesism and find the entirety of the theme. In this process of reconstruction, the reader plays the role of a "co-author."