Keywords
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
607 | Decay | Olfactory | ||
611 | Summer | Time of Year | ||
614 | Midnight | Time of Day | ||
636 | Pre-dawn | Time of Day | ||
654 | Gender stereotype | Domestic Space | ||
655 | Crime scene | Place | ||
687 | Night | Time of Day | ||
688 | Supper table | Domestic Space | ||
691 | Road | Public | ||
692 | Corn-planting time | (First level term) | ||
693 | Corn planting time | Time of Year | ||
695 | Cottonfield | Place | ||
698 | Dawn | Time of Day | ||
699 | Delta | Natural | ||
702 | Rain | Weather | ||
706 | Supper | Time of Day |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
608 | Simile | Figures of Speech | ||
613 | Indeterminacy | Narrative | ||
622 | Western vernacular | Diction | ||
627 | Water | Figures of Speech | ||
641 | Neologism | Style | ||
666 | Shadow | Figures of Speech | ||
668 | Temporal projection | Narrative |
When the narrative gets ahead of itself, for example in "Race at Morning" Event 305.1 begins "Then we seen him for the first time," but that does not actually happen until two Events later, 305.3, "and then suddenly . . . the buck hisself" (305). It doesn't matter whether the narrative is looking forward a dozen sentences or a hundred pages, whenever it explicitly anticipates something that it won't actually depict until a later Event, it's "Temporal projection." SR |
|
679 | Mask | Figures of Speech | ||
682 | Simile-mask | Figures of Speech | ||
690 | African American vernacular dialect | Diction | ||
705 | Racist term | Diction |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
609 | Door | Recurring Tropes | ||
617 | Absence as disguise | Absence/Loss |
This was created to note Flem Snopes' calculated absence during the horse auction, the way he has orchestrated it from behind the scene. I'm not sure this occurs with anyone but Flem, but it occurs multiple times in his case. SR |
|
618 | Dogs | Animals | ||
626 | African-American | Community | ||
629 | Face | Body | ||
631 | Appearance-plain | Body | ||
633 | Watch | Time | ||
640 | Remembering passim | Memory | ||
642 | Junk | Objects | ||
645 | Furniture | Objects | ||
646 | Clock | Objects | ||
647 | Innocence | Character | ||
653 | Thinness | Body | ||
661 | Mules | Animals | ||
669 | Wedding license | Objects | ||
670 | Car | Objects | ||
676 | Social life | Community | ||
680 | Blood | Body | ||
683 | Independence | Values | ||
684 | Courage | Values | ||
694 | Whippoorwills | Animals | ||
707 | Renewal | Absence/Loss |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
610 | Female | Intergenerational | ||
620 | Sibling | Familial | ||
625 | Abusive | Marital | ||
628 | Elopement | Marital | ||
656 | Mother-son | Familial | ||
664 | Snobbery | Social | ||
674 | Husband-wife | Marital | ||
675 | Employer-employee | Hierarchical | ||
678 | Child as authority | Hierarchical | ||
700 | Rivalry | Commercial |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
612 | Elopement | Interaction, Social | ||
619 | Shopping | Interaction, Social | ||
623 | Prohibiting | Moral |
Here in the general sense of interdiction, forbidding, proscribing - rather than "prohibition," i.e. outlawing alcohol. JW |
|
630 | Washing clothes | Physical | ||
632 | Command | Verbal | ||
634 | Auction | Interaction, Social | ||
637 | Taunt | Verbal | ||
648 | Legal surrender | Moral | ||
649 | Confession | Moral | ||
651 | Crying | Bodily | ||
657 | Peer group | Interaction, Social | ||
658 | Washing clothes | Work | ||
659 | Hitting | Violent | ||
663 | Sleeping | Bodily | ||
671 | Gossip | Verbal | ||
672 | Entry | Violent | ||
677 | Nurturing | Emotional | ||
685 | Impounding | Economic | ||
686 | Paying | Economic | ||
689 | Looking | Perceptual | ||
696 | Share-cropping|Tenantry | Economic |
There are significant differences between "share-cropping" and "tenant farming" in reality. "Tenants" typically furnished their own farming tools and livestock, and had at least a measure of control over what crops they planted on land they rented from a landlord; "share-croppers" typically only contributed their own labor, with the landlord dictating what they would raise and providing the animals and tools they used. But in his fiction Faulkner does not maintain this distinction, using the terms as essentially synonymous. SR |
|
697 | Listening | Perceptual | ||
704 | Walking | Movement |
Term ID | Term | Parent | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
615 | Hierarchical | Race | ||
616 | Wound | War | ||
621 | Women | Clothes | ||
624 | Middle | Class | ||
635 | Ambition | Class | ||
638 | Men vs women | Gender | ||
639 | Femininity | Gender | ||
643 | Rural poverty | Clothes | ||
644 | Class consciousness | Class | ||
650 | Youth | Age | ||
652 | Justice of the Peace | Law | ||
660 | Evidence | Law | ||
662 | Chivalry | Gender | ||
665 | Domestic | Violence | ||
667 | Newspaper | Mass Media | ||
673 | Domestic | Labor | ||
681 | Inheritance | Law | ||
708 | Radio | Mass Media |