Unnamed People of This Delta

Character Key Number: 
2726
Display Name: 
Unnamed People of This Delta
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Unnamed People of This Delta
Ever Present in Yoknapatawpha?: 
No
Biography: 

In "Delta Autumn" and again in the chapter with that title in Go Down, Moses, Ike McCaslin has vividly creates an image the diverse group of human beings that he thinks of as the "spawn" of the modern Delta, where the boundaries between races seem to have broken down (279, 346). It includes "white men" who own plantations and "commute every night to Memphis," "black men" who own plantations and even towns and "keep their town houses in Chicago," and is an amalgamation of "Chinese and African and Aryan and Jew" who "breed" together (279, 346). This is one of the most racially, ethnically and socio-economically diverse groups in Faulkner's fiction, though it is safe to say that it reflects Ike's (and perhaps Faulkner's) fears more than any reality, in the Mississippi Delta or anywhere else in the broader U.S.