Keywords
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2532 | Fated | Determinism |
Created to describe a situation that seems meant to be, as when Susan Reed seems destined for Hawkshaw's barbershop in "Hair." --LW & BR |
|
2534 | Hand grip | Objects | ||
2536 | Second-hand | Objects |
These are items that get passed from person to person and re-purposed. Much of this happens in the Snopes family, but there are also other examples. JB |
|
2537 | Gasoline | Objects |
Any time gasoline and fuel is mentioned as an object, not with regard to smell. It occurs a number of times in The Reivers as a fetishistic object of modernity. JB |
|
2553 | Plow | Objects | ||
2559 | Gold tooth | Objects | ||
2570 | Termites | Animals | ||
2581 | Gamecock | Animals | ||
2592 | Solitary | Recurring Tropes | ||
2593 | Demijohn | Objects | ||
2594 | Tombstone | Objects | ||
2598 | Voice | Body | ||
2600 | Permanence | Time | ||
2603 | Stove polish | Objects | ||
2604 | Absurdity | Meaning | ||
2607 | Sound of a gunshot | Recurring Tropes | ||
2608 | Haunting | Supernatural | ||
2609 | Touch | Recurring Tropes | ||
2612 | Haunted house | Supernatural | ||
2613 | Sickness | Supernatural | ||
2615 | Brain / mind | Body | ||
2616 | Sensory experience | Body | ||
2620 | Womb | Body | ||
2622 | Mediation | Recurring Tropes |
Used to describe the state of being mediated, especially a relationship where the perceiver looks upon or through a medium. JC |
|
2623 | Fairy-tale | Recurring Tropes | ||
2624 | Homebound | Home | ||
2625 | Echo | Recurring Tropes | ||
2626 | Reality | Recurring Tropes | ||
2629 | Mirror | Objects | ||
2631 | Restoration / rebuilding | Recurring Tropes |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2533 | Renaming | Progress |
The renaming of a product or object due to modernization. This is different than Themes-> Naming -> Change over time which is related to people. JB |
|
2540 | Commerce | Economy |
Any moment in which the advent or nature of commerce is commented upon. In this instance, it is proto-capitalistic practices that take place as Yoknapatawpha moves from frontier to civilization. JB |
|
2544 | Cattle rustling | Crime | ||
2545 | Commercial sexual exploitation | Crime |
Undoubtedly the more common term searched will be "prostitution". The aim of this term is to identify the crime being actively committed by the pimps and bordello madams. JB |
|
2546 | Stolen valor | War |
Whenever someone claims to have fought in a war, but it is implied that he (always he) did not do so. This comes up quite a bit in Faulkner. JB |
|
2569 | Pants | Clothes | ||
2571 | Castration | Violence | ||
2572 | College | Education | ||
2575 | Beer | Alcohol | ||
2576 | Republican | Politics |
In The Reivers Lucius Priest defines the various positions of Conservative, Liberal, Republican, and Democrat in the following manner: "Like this: a Republican is a man who made his money; a Liberal is a man who inherited his; a Democrat is a barefoot Liberal in a cross-country race; a Conservative is a Republican who has learned to read and write." (109) Though, these positions are hardly set in stone it is important to note the distinct separation between political outlook and political party. JB |
|
2577 | Democrat | Politics |
In The Reivers Lucius Priest defines the various positions of Conservative, Liberal, Republican, and Democrat in the following manner: "Like this: a Republican is a man who made his money; a Liberal is a man who inherited his; a Democrat is a barefoot Liberal in a cross-country race; a Conservative is a Republican who has learned to read and write." (109) Though, these positions are hardly set in stone it is important to note the distinct separation between political outlook and political party. JB |
|
2578 | Liberal | Politics |
In The Reivers Lucius Priest defines the various positions of Conservative, Liberal, Republican, and Democrat in the following manner: "Like this: a Republican is a man who made his money; a Liberal is a man who inherited his; a Democrat is a barefoot Liberal in a cross-country race; a Conservative is a Republican who has learned to read and write." (109) Though, these positions are hardly set in stone it is important to note the distinct separation between political outlook and political party. JB |
|
2579 | Conservative | Politics |
In The Reivers Lucius Priest defines the various positions of Conservative, Liberal, Republican, and Democrat in the following manner: "Like this: a Republican is a man who made his money; a Liberal is a man who inherited his; a Democrat is a barefoot Liberal in a cross-country race; a Conservative is a Republican who has learned to read and write." (109) Though, these positions are hardly set in stone it is important to note the distinct separation between political outlook and political party. JB |
|
2582 | Gin | Alcohol | ||
2583 | Race | Alcohol |
These are racial issues specifically related to alcohol. For example, Minnie in The Reivers declines to drink with too many white people at once (113). There are also other issues around the production, sale, and consumption of alcohol that cut across racial lines. I thought it was more appropriate to place this here rather than in the race category within cultural issues, as that is already getting full, and becomes the alcohol predominates here. JB |
|
2584 | Bribe | Crime |
Any payoff to law enforcement or other institution to circumvent the strictures of the law. In The Reivers Lucius Priest refers to this as "blackmail" (112). This is meant ironically. JB |
|
2585 | Solidarity | Race |
Whenever characters feel a relationship or shared purpose with another character due to racial affinity. In the specific example, Lucius imagines that Ned and Minnie have some type of relationship because they are both African-American (117). JB |
|
2587 | Husbandry | Agriculture |
Any part of a text related to the care and breeding of animals. The immediate context for this is on an actual farm, as for example Mink's attempt to breed his cow with a local bull. It also extends out to any knowledge of animals for the purposes of domestication or labor. For example, Lucius Priest being able to identify a horse as "three-quarters-bred" in The Reivers, though the horse itself is not on a farm. JB |
|
2619 | Transsexuality | Gender | ||
2630 | Shirt | Clothes |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2535 | Flatulence | Bodily | ||
2541 | Ox | Movement | ||
2542 | Ferry | Movement | ||
2547 | Conversion | Interaction, Social |
Whenever a religious person changes someone's mind on religion. The example here is Hightower taming Ballanbaugh's through violent conversion. JB |
|
2550 | Surrey | Movement | ||
2554 | Scamming | Economic | ||
2557 | Streetcar | Movement | ||
2562 | Accident | Work | ||
2563 | Losing job | Work | ||
2564 | Night watchman | Work | ||
2574 | Secret | Moral |
This is the action of keeping a secret or deciding whether or not to keep a secret. It is not necessarily good or bad, rather keeping a secret is a type of moral choice. Since, this is a singular secret and not a protracted secret, as for example Linda Snopes's parentage, this is placed under moral actions and not themes. JB |
|
2589 | Marching | Military | ||
2591 | Promotion | Military | ||
2605 | Ultimatum | Verbal | ||
2606 | Contempt | Emotional | ||
2627 | Calm | Emotional | ||
2628 | Rebel yell | Verbal |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2538 | Fishing camp | Place | ||
2539 | Bridge | Public | ||
2543 | Outlaw country | Place |
On a number of occasions, Faulkner makes reference to stretches of outlaw country. Places where illegal and illicit practices transpire, but there is no enforcement by local or federal authority. This is particular in reference to Frenchman's Bend in the Hamlet, but also Ballenbaugh's historic emergence in the Reivers. JB |
|
2548 | Loft | Domestic Space | ||
2549 | Nature | Auditory |
The sounds of nature, generally on a quiet night. JB |
|
2555 | Lunch | Time of Day | ||
2558 | Bordello | Olfactory | ||
2560 | Bathroom | Domestic Space | ||
2561 | Paducah | Place | ||
2610 | Stairway | Domestic Space |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2551 | Landscape | Description | ||
2552 | Comedy | Genre Conventions | ||
2556 | Rubicon | Allusion, Historical | ||
2565 | Khan, Genghis | Allusion, Historical | ||
2566 | Tamerlane | Allusion, Historical | ||
2567 | Attila the Hun | Allusion, Historical | ||
2568 | Masons | Allusion, Historical | ||
2573 | Santa Claus | Allusion, Mythical |
I'm assuming the group of people who both read Faulkner and believe in Santa Claus is relatively small, so saying he is mythical is not a spoiler. JB |
|
2580 | Tennessee | Allusion, Geographical | ||
2586 | Parsham | Allusion, Geographical | ||
2588 | Priapus | Allusion, Mythical | ||
2595 | Skull | Figures of Speech | ||
2596 | Loom | Figures of Speech | ||
2597 | Stone | Figures of Speech | ||
2599 | Scratch | Figures of Speech | ||
2601 | Scarecrow | Figures of Speech | ||
2602 | Sherman, William Tecumseh | Allusion, Historical | ||
2611 | Fantasy | Narrative |
Whenever a narrator engages in an event that she or he knows to be pure fantasy or wish fulfillment. JC |
|
2617 | Eve | Allusion, Biblical | ||
2618 | Snake | Allusion, Biblical | ||
2621 | Fish | Figures of Speech | ||
2632 | Rape | Figures of Speech |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2590 | Male-male relationship | Friendship |