Keywords
| Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5039 | Doom becomes chief | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 1308 | Dots | Typography/Orthography |
This is for the occasions when Faulkner uses a series of dots as a feature of his prose - i.e. ". . ." or ". . . . . ." We can't call these dots ellipses, because they do not represent anything being left out of the text. The most disconcerting use of this technique is in "Miss Zilphia Gant." SR |
|
| 849 | Double entendre | Diction | ||
| 2189 | Dragon's teeth | Allusion, Mythical | ||
| 3511 | Drained marsh | Figures of Speech | ||
| 3759 | Drama / Theatre imagery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 4520 | Drawing of an eye | Typography/Orthography | ||
| 5010 | Drawing of delta | Typography/Orthography | ||
| 3460 | Dreiser, Theodore | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 5063 | Driving to Goodwin's | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 4393 | Duke John of Lorraine | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 1878 | Dumas, Alexandre | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 3295 | Dumas, Alexandre | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 3236 | Dunquerque | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 5674 | Duse, Eleonora | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 5429 | East Lynne | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 4633 | eeeeeeeeeeeeeee | Language | ||
| 4518 | Egypt | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 4492 | Einstein, Albert | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 5699 | El Paso | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 2032 | Electricity | Figures of Speech | ||
| 742 | Elegiac | Tone | ||
| 3158 | Eliot, T. S. | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 5637 | Ellipses | Typography/Orthography | ||
| 1425 | Ellipsis | Language | ||
| 1049 | Embedded text, cursive | Intertextuality |
This term was created In reference to the names "George Wilkins" and "Nathalie Beauchamp" written by hand on the wedding license in "Point of Law." JW |
|
| 1180 | Embedded text, lettering | Intertextuality | ||
| 3912 | Embroidery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 3218 | Emperor Maximilian | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 2707 | England | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 1637 | Epiphany | Narrative | ||
| 3220 | Erinys | Allusion, Mythical | ||
| 5047 | Etching name on window | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 3927 | Ethnic slur | Diction | ||
| 4088 | Euboeleus / Eubuleus | Allusion, Mythical | ||
| 5071 | Eula's medallion unveiled | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 5442 | Europe | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 2617 | Eve | Allusion, Biblical | ||
| 4322 | Exodus | Allusion, Biblical | ||
| 760 | Exoticism | Figures of Speech | ||
| 4963 | Explanatory passage | Interpretation | ||
| 1661 | Explorers | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 2287 | Expression | Figures of Speech |
Any common expression, saying, or proverb that Faulkner uses. For example, "cat on a hot stove" or "sticks out like a horse in a duck pond." JB |
|
| 915 | Eyes | Figures of Speech | ||
| 1204 | Eyes | Description | ||
| 1545 | Face | Figures of Speech | ||
| 2611 | Fantasy | Narrative |
Whenever a narrator engages in an event that she or he knows to be pure fantasy or wish fulfillment. JC |
|
| 1370 | Farce | Tone | ||
| 1278 | Fate | Allusion, Mythical | ||
| 2802 | Faulkner text | Intertextuality | ||
| 2300 | Faustus | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 3789 | Female monsters | Allusion, Mythical | ||
| 3692 | Fertilise / Fertility imagery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 5107 | Fielding, Henry | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 5314 | Fields, Lew | Allusion, Historical |
Part of the vaudeville comedy duo Weber and Fields. JHB |
|
| 408 | Figures of Speech | (First level term) | ||
| 5721 | Finucane, Brendan Eamonn Fergus | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 5727 | Finucane, Brendan Eamonn Fergus | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 3872 | Fire | Figures of Speech | ||
| 4054 | Fire | Symbolism | ||
| 5042 | First settlers arrive | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 490 | First-person | Narrative | ||
| 494 | First-person passim | Narrative | ||
| 3131 | First-person passim throughout section | Narrative | ||
| 504 | First-person plural passim | Narrative | ||
| 487 | First-person vernacular | Narrative | ||
| 488 | First-person vernacular passim | Narrative | ||
| 2621 | Fish | Figures of Speech | ||
| 5119 | Fitzgerald, F. Scott | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 1533 | Flag | Figures of Speech | ||
| 5738 | Flash forward | Narrative | ||
| 5060 | Flem and Eula marry | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 5215 | Flem reaches Jefferson | Recurring Episodes | ||
| 3299 | Flood imagery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 5366 | Florida | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 4373 | Food and drink imagery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 2290 | Ford, Henry | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 4042 | Foreign accent / dialect | Language | ||
| 3827 | Foreign language | Language | ||
| 3038 | Foreshadowing | Narrative | ||
| 5108 | Forever Amber | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 1486 | Forrest, Nathan Bedford | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 4785 | Fort Moultrie, South Carolina | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 2327 | Fort Sumter | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 3289 | Fragments | Language | ||
| 1659 | Frame | Narrative |
Though somewhat obvious, this refers to a "nested" narrative where a story is told by someone to someone else. The example here is the opening of The Reivers, where the entire text is framed as being told to Lucius III by Lucius II. JB |
|
| 1265 | France | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 5380 | Francesca | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 5434 | Franco, Francisco | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 5717 | Frankenstein | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 2849 | Free indirect discourse | Narrative | ||
| 2780 | French | Language | ||
| 3677 | French Lick, Indiana | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 5549 | Freud, Sigmund | Allusion, Historical | ||
| 1315 | Freudian | Symbolism | ||
| 2956 | Gaines's Mill | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 3767 | Galahad | Allusion, Literary | ||
| 3343 | Galilee | Allusion, Geographical | ||
| 4348 | Gambling imagery | Figures of Speech | ||
| 4351 | Gaps | Narrative |