Unnamed Jefferson Townspeople

Display Name: 
Unnamed Jefferson Townspeople
Sort Name: 
Unnamed Jefferson Townspeople
Race: 
White
Gender: 
Multi Gender Group
Class: 
MultiClass Group
Rank: 
Minor
Vitality: 
Dead
Biography: 

This icon represents the various inhabitants of Jefferson over the years. This 'character' includes the people whom Rosa repeatedly calls "they" in Chapter 5 - as in the chapter's very first words:"So they will have told you . . . " (107). It also includes the group that the novel occasionally refers to "the town" (24). Like Rosa's "they," this is implicitly a racially segregated term: the town's white population as a collective entity. Often, however, it is also segregated into male and female. The men, for example, gather at the Holston House (34), go out to Sutpen's property to watch as he builds his plantation house (27), to hunt (30), or to witness the wrestling matches behind the stable (20). The women attend church with their children ("ladies moving in hoops among the miniature broadcloth of little boys and the pantalettes of little girls, in the skirts of the time when ladies did not walk but floated," 23), realize when Sutpen turns his attention to the quest for a wife (31), preside over the "ceremony" when the Sartoris and Sutpen regiment leaves for the Civil War (65), and nurse the wounded soldiers who arrive at the improvised hospital in town (99). Together, many of these men and women were invited to Sutpen and Ellen's wedding, and they are presumably together in couples who sit in the "carriages and buggies" outside the church while the mob confronts the newlyweds (43). At the very end, "they" try unsuccessfully to capture Jim Bond (301).

Individual or Group: 
Group
Character changes class in this text: 

digyok:node/character/15473