Analyzing The Electra Complex In Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

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"A Rose for Emily" wrote in the early 1900's tracts the life of a girl oppressed by her father.. Her father along with other towns people put her on a pedestal, and protected her like she was something special. Emily's father was the most influential person in her life and failed to give her the freedom needed to experience the real world. Emily was shaped by her father at a young age to need attention and love at all costs. The Electra complex in girls is very heavily shown within "A Rose for Emily." The Electra complex is defined as "the sexual attachment of a female child to her father"(Grief 435). The Electra complex starts with the girl being attached to the mother and showing a severe need for parents. Then it changes from the mother …show more content…

Her social life was deprived at starting very young, which caused her to not know how to act. This social deprivation of a child left her with no friends and the inability to communicate. Her mind was corrupted simply because she was lost without her father. The phycological aspect also was corrupted throughout the story. It is obvious that she has disorders. One main disorder is eating. It says in the book that she gained great weight after the time her father died. This often happens in time of tragedy, but this shows that she is susceptible to falling in these traps. Disorders along with her mind wilting away turn Emily into someone who no one saw her to become. "A Rose for Emily" is a perfect example of how the Electra Complex can affect one girls life. Overprotection and detainment from society shaped Emily's life. The love for her father ultimately hurt her because it caused her to lack social skills. Her late find in Homer Barron caused her to feel like he was the last hope. The death of her father and killing of Barron portrayed the crazy phycological and sociological aspects of this story. A lost girl with an unethical and spontaneous mind led to a story of mystery and

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