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    is easy to control and change their thought process due to them being confused in situations they don’t know much about. In “Barn Burning” William Faulkner focuses on the morals of society versus the morals of sticking with family through the eyes of a ten year old boy‚ Sartoris Snopes‚ and the situations he has faced because of his father’s acts of burning down peoples barns. Sartoris Snopes is the ten year old son of Abner Snopes who is a man of his own law and doesn’t follow society’s rules

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    A Critical Approach To "Barn Burning" (by William Faulkner) "Barn Burning" is a sad story because it very clearly shows the classical struggle between the "privileged" and the "underprivileged" classes. Time after time emotions of despair surface from both the protagonist and the antagonist involved in the story. This story outlines two distinct protagonists and two distinct antagonists. The first two are Colonel Sartoris Snopes ("Sarty") and his father Abner Snopes ("Ab"). Sarty is

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    In William Faulker’s shorty story “Barn Burning” they story is narrated about a father name Abner Snopes and his son name Sarty Snopes. Sarty finds out that his dad has been responsible for burning down barns when he has a conflict with others. His father words are used to manipulate and instill fear on Sarty. "You got to learn. You got to learn to stick to your own blood or you ain’t going to have any blood to stick to you."(Faulkners 1938). This is one example of words that are used to get Sarty

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    The Old South has a lot of hatred. This hatred is seen through the rich and poor‚ north and south‚ and through generations of families. William Faulkner’s‚ “Barn Burning” illustrates many of these feelings. Sarty Snopes is the son of Abner Snopes. Abner Snopes is a brutal and demanding father. Abner is a victim of the poor south and The Civil War. Benjamin DeMott writes‚” together with the ignorance and brutality in Abner Snopes‚ there is a ferocious‚ primitive undeceivedness in his reading

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    Sophie Shin 6385592 Professor St-Jacques ENG 1120 CC February 29th 2012 Barn Burning: The Right Way vs. The Wrong Father William Faulkner’s commitment to depicting “the problems of the human heart in conflict with itself” (245) find perfect expression in “Barn Burning‚” in which Sarty is torn between his growing realization of his father’s depravity and his innate conviction that there is another‚ better way of being in the world. The way in which Faulkner has Sarty’s language used towards

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    locked up her freedom of love‚ which eventually leads her to murder. Miss Emily and Abner are both difference on their family’s status. Abner dominates the whole family and community while Miss Emily is the one who being controlled by her father. In "Barn Burning‚" Faulkner illustrates that Abner is a father who always control his family and wants his son‚ Sarty‚ to show loyalty to the family and community. At the beginning‚ Sarty wants to protect his father even he knows that his father is doing

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    A Comparison of Two Characters in A Rose for Emily and Barn Burning In "A Rose for Emily" and "Barn Burning‚" William Faulkner creates two characters worthy of comparison. Emily Grierson‚ a recluse from Jefferson‚ Mississippi‚ is an important figure in the town‚ despite spending most of her life in seclusion. On the contrary‚ Abner Snopes is a loud‚ fiery-tempered man that most people tend to avoid. If these characters are judged by reputation and outward appearance only‚ the conclusion would

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    William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning” has many minor characters‚ some that even have only one line. Colonel Sartoris Snopes or better known as Sarty is one of the more major characters that is defined by the minor characters‚ mainly being his family. They help define Sarty’s character by being his opposite. His mother Lennie Snopes might as well not exist since she does nothing that is really useful in the story. The twins‚ Sartys sisters do not help out their mother and just sit around talking meanwhile

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    Patriarchy‚ Family‚ and Poverty: An Analysis of Themes of Southern Literature in the William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning’’ The culture in the United States of America varies from region to region. The South has its own unique form of culture. This unique capacity was captured by several authors in the form of literature. Southern literature corresponds with each other in terms of common history‚ sense of community‚ racism‚ religion‚ land tension‚ social class‚ and dialect. William Faulkner‚ an American

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    In the short story “Barn Burning” William Faulkner creates a dramatic story enthralled with family dynamics. The character of Abner Snopes is presented as a hard man with the inability to show a softer side to others or his children. Not only does Mr. Snopes lack the ability show kind emotions he also seems to have somewhat of a temper. Faulkner portrays Sarty Snopes as being the youngest boy of Mr. Snopes and having an eagerness to make his father proud. Faulkner delivers what I believe to be a

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