Moonshine Still in Uncle Willy in "Uncle Willy" (Location)

Display Label: 
Moonshiner's Place
Map Icon: 
Other Structure
Authority : 
Context (text, as interpreted)
X: 
1664
Y: 
678
Description: 

After Willy gets his sister to buy him a car, he and Secretary learn to drive it "on the night trips they would make back into the hill country to buy corn whisky" (236). "Hill country" in the Yoknapatawpha fictions invariably means the area east of Jefferson, where the land was ill-suited to farming cotton. Like Mississippi in real life during Faulkner's lifetime, Yoknapatawpha was "dry" - i.e. it was illegal to sell alcohol - so hidden stills where the poor whites who lived in the hills made and sold moonshine from fermented corn are a regular feature of Faulkner's fictional landscape.

Role: 
Only Mentioned in Text
Status: 
Continuous
Types: 
Moonshiner|Bootlegger

digyok:node/location/13559