Conflict In As I Lay Dying

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Death is one of the most difficult concepts for people to come to terms with because it is an experience unknown by the living. The novel As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner is centralized around the passing of the hard working mother, Addie Bundren. Her last wish was to be buried in Jefferson, so her family embarks on a long and arduous trek to fulfill it. On the journey, the characters struggle with obstacles that make going to Jefferson exceptionally difficult as well as internal conflicts that arise from the death, ranging from fixating on building a coffin to stating that their mother is a fish. Even though a character may be dead for a majority of the book, the lack of presence acts as a catalyst for events that heavily influences other …show more content…

Faulkner’s utilization of different perspectives enables the audience to understand the motive behind certain characters’ actions and their grieving process. Addie’s unorthodox actions when she was alive have an immense influence on her family before and after her death. While alive she was the workhorse, as depicted by her hands that “they doubted even yet the actuality of rest [...] which they know cannot last” (51). Addie’s diligent work ethic kept the family functional, especially since her husband, Anse, is useless and “rubs his hands slowly on his knees” most of the time. Unlike Anse’s hands, Addie’s hands are so used to labor that they are personified as being in disbelief and have the need to work. All of Addie’s duties makes her the matriarch of the family, which she takes advantage of. She intentionally causes her family hardship in the form of forcing them to bury her in Jefferson by having that as her last wish. The family almost has no choice because denying to fulfill a dying wish would be frowned upon by society. The trek the family embarks …show more content…

While the Bundrens are crossing the river, a log with foam that “hangs like the beard of an old man [...] surge[s] up out of the water and [stands] for an instant [...] like Christ” (148). The log symbolizes Jesus and divine intent of sending Addie to Hell. However, her family intervenes, which results in the loss of two mules and Cash experiencing physical trauma in the form of vomit and breaking his leg. Addie’s life of pridefulness and sin doom her to Hell, which is what causes her family misfortune. The traumatic events young Vardaman witnesses are too complex for his seven to ten year-old brain to fully comprehend, so he relies on his child logic to make sense of his reality. He judges the world in a simplistic way by focusing on things physically. Vardaman focuses on the fish he carried by saying “Hit was a-layin right there on the ground. And now [Dewey Dell is] gittin ready to cook it” (56). He then contemplates and comes to the conclusion that “an is [is] different from my is” (56). This differentiation in Vardaman’s thoughts allows the audience to understand his

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