Keywords

Term IDsort ascending Vocabulary Parent Term Description
1669 Environment Atmospheric Chaos
1668 Cultural Issues Food Community
1667 Themes and Motifs Arrivals/Departures Arrival
1666 Themes and Motifs Community Wedding
1665 Cultural Issues Progress Technological
1664 Cultural Issues Technology Television
1663 Cultural Issues Technology Invention
1662 Cultural Issues Progress Historical
1661 Aesthetics Allusion, Historical Explorers
1660 Cultural Issues History Explorers
1659 Aesthetics Narrative Frame

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

1658 Themes and Motifs Objects Umbrella
1657 Cultural Issues Clothes Bonnet
1656 Cultural Issues Clothes Mourning
1655 Cultural Issues Gender Widow
1654 Actions Emotional Defeat
1653 Themes and Motifs Objects Trunk
1652 Cultural Issues Region Reconstruction
1651 Actions Emotional Crying
1650 Aesthetics Narrative Self-Reflective
1649 Actions Emotional Embarrassment
1648 Actions Work Getting water
1647 Themes and Motifs Objects Surrey
1646 Themes and Motifs Objects Parasol
1645 Cultural Issues Clothes Shawl
1644 Actions Domestic Teaching
1643 Cultural Issues Gender Clothing
1642 Cultural Issues Religion Episcopal
1641 Cultural Issues Religion Baptist
1640 Cultural Issues Gender Body
1639 Aesthetics Narrative Withholding
1638 Aesthetics Narrative Anti-climax
1637 Aesthetics Narrative Epiphany
1636 Aesthetics Language Indian
1635 Cultural Issues Land-Use Agricultural
1634 Cultural Issues Land-Use Spiritual
1633 Cultural Issues Hunting and Fishing Annual
1632 Cultural Issues Ritual Funeral
1631 Relationships Friendship Racial

I did not create this definition, but I read this as friendships that occur by virtue of people being of the same race. For example, Ned and Ephum in the Reivers are surrounded by white people and form friendship. Not sure how this term is meant to be used though. JB

1630 Themes and Motifs Values Moral authority
1629 Cultural Issues Hunting and Fishing Ritual
1628 Cultural Issues Ritual Initiation
1627 Themes and Motifs Past Old days
1626 Actions Hunting Turkey hunting
1625 Actions Hunting Racoon hunting
1624 Relationships Interracial Indian-white
1623 Cultural Issues Class Blood
1622 Relationships Marital Forced
1621 Relationships Marital Interracial
1620 Actions Hunting Blowing horn
1619 Actions Verbal Honor
1618 Actions Hunting Tracking
1617 Cultural Issues Age Old age
1616 Actions Hunting Waiting
1615 Themes and Motifs Objects Antlers
1614 Actions Hunting Breaking camp
1613 Themes and Motifs Appearance Perspective

I added this for "The Old People," 206.5, to describe how the narrator sees Sam Fathers growing smaller and smaller as the hunting party leaves him behind. I don't really like the term that I chose but I couldn't think of anything else. LW

1612 Actions Emotional Self-doubt
1611 Actions Hunting Rabbit hunting
1610 Actions Hunting Teaching
1609 Themes and Motifs Appearance Inscrutable

I added this for "The Old People," 205.3, to reflect the lack of emotion that Sam Fathers shows. LW

1608 Environment Time of Year November
1607 Actions Hunting Possum
1606 Aesthetics Diction Native American languages

I created this for "The Old People," 204.2, because the emphasis is on the "old tongue" that Sam Fathers speaks. LW

1605 Aesthetics Diction Hill dialect
1604 Actions Bodily Squatting
1603 Actions Economic Carpentry
1602 Actions Economic Blacksmithing
1601 Actions Movement Running away
1600 Cultural Issues Race Native American

I added this in addition to the more specific Indian tribal identifications because I thought that it would be useful to have a larger umbrella term for users searching for Faulkner's Native American material. LW

1599 Actions Emotional Excitement
1598 Actions Bodily Drinking
1597 Actions Bodily Thirsting
1596 Themes and Motifs Community Crowd
1595 Environment Natural Swamp
1594 Relationships Hierarchical Master-slave
1593 Actions Bodily Decomposition
1592 Cultural Issues Religion Totem
1591 Actions Non-human Attack
1590 Themes and Motifs Animals Snake
1589 Environment Atmospheric Doom
1588 Cultural Issues Violence Killing animal
1587 Cultural Issues Race Miscegenation
1586 Actions Bodily Panting
1585 Cultural Issues History Great Migration

This term is widely used by historians to refer to the movement of some six million African Americans out of the South and into the urban North and West between the First World War and the 1960s. Samuel Worsham Beauchamp, who in the 1930s leaves Yoknapatawpha to live in Chicago in "Go Down, Moses," is an example of a character who participates in the Great Migration. SR

1584 Cultural Issues Race Segregation
1583 Themes and Motifs Values Love
1582 Cultural Issues Region North
1581 Relationships Interracial Marriage
1580 Cultural Issues Sexuality Interracial
1579 Cultural Issues Segregation Marriage
1578 Actions Work Teaching
1577 Cultural Issues Race Racial spheres

TMT: I created this keyword to highlight the differences between the young woman's racial experience in the North and the South, where certain kinds of labor are done by certain races--in this case, taking in laundry by black women.

1576 Relationships Familial Extended family
1575 Relationships Interracial Romantic
1574 Cultural Issues Region The West
1573 Relationships Romantic Extra-marital
1572 Actions Perceptual Ambiguity
1571 Themes and Motifs Values Bad conduct
1570 Actions Communication Without words

When someone communicates by means of something other than words (written or spoken); for example, the envelope full of money Boyd wants Ike to give his mistress, or the verbena that Drusilla leaves on Bayard's pillow.

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