Addie In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying

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When first reading As I Lay Dying, Addie became more of a main character than just a character mentioned. One would have not expected that this book takes place in a patriarchal world. When Addie passed away, she had one section that took place in the center of the book out of fifty-nine sections. During this time, mothers were specifically to blame for familial dysfunctions (Wannamaker). Wannamaker agrees, “Addie Bundren of William Faulkner’s As I Laying has often been characterized as an unnatural, loveless, cold mother whose demands drive her family on a miserable trek to bury her body in Jefferson” (Wannamaker).This applied to Addie, as she was a mother to five children. She was another character of Faulkner’s who was not able to express …show more content…

Her monologue is where of being, knowing, and saying were discovered “but Addie is always finding her answer only to lose it” (Pierce 299). She was longing for an escape to create a romantic ideal, in order for feelings to be transferred without the corruption of language, and to branch off of the broken world of self-conscious. Although, Addie’s discovery of Anse’s reference of love and Cash’s birth started her loss of romantic ideals because “Addie knows we can never hope to create what we “are”” (Pierce 295). When Addie had become pregnant, she claimed that “living was terrible,” but held onto ideals that “this was the answer,” and that a type of wholeness, like motherhood, was possible (Faulkner 163). Pierce points out, “All sex comes to, Addie finally learns, is the had-been-without-having-been of pregnancy” (298). Her idealism was later shattered because life is terrible and that “We must replace, the species must go on” (Pierce 299). Pierce reasons that “from whom she wants to be further removed and remade a virgin”, wanting to regain what Anse took from her (302). She then created her own

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