Jefferson Barbershop in Light in August (Location)

The barbershop is more than a place to get a shave and a haircut; it is a gathering place for men on the Square. When Joe Brown quits his job at the planing mill, one of the hands says that "his address from now on will be the barbershop" (45). And in fact Brown is in the barbershop one Saturday night when he brags to "a crowd" of men about how he and Christmas as bootleggers - until Christmas shuts him up (80).

Memphis in Light in August (Location)

Founded in 1819, Memphis, Tennessee, had over 162,000 residents in 1920, making it the closest big city to Yoknapatawpha County. It plays a role in many of Faulkner's novels and stories, especially as the place where people from Jefferson went to misbehave: to buy liquor and gamble in the nightclubs or have sex in the hotels and brothels in the notorious Beale Street area.

Cabin at Burden Place in Light in August (Location)

The one-room "tumble down negro cabin" (36) behind the Burden mansion that Christmas lives in with "Brown" has two cots and a window. A kerosene lantern sits on a wooden box, which serves as a table (103). The cabin was originally built before the Civil War for slaves on the plantation, but has been empty for years before Joe moves in. After he and "Brown" depart, Bryon has Lena Grove occupy the cabin, and it is the place where her child is born.

Cabin at Burden Place

The one-room "tumble down negro cabin" (36) behind the Burden mansion that Joe Christmas lives in with 'Joe Brown' in Light in August was originally built before the Civil War for slaves on the plantation, but has been empty for years before Joe moves in. After he and 'Brown' depart, Bryon Bunch moves Lena Grove into the cabin, and it is the place where her child is born.

Woods behind Burden House in Light in August (Location)

The path that Joe walks on to get back to the Burden place from Jefferson runs "for a mile" through these woods (116).

Woods behind Burden House

The path that Joe Christmas walks on to get back to the Burden place from Jefferson runs "for a mile" through these woods (Light in August, 116).

Carolina in the Civil War in "The Unvanquished" (Location)

According to Bayard's paraphrase, Aunt Louisa's letter to Granny says that she has found out where Drusilla has gone: "she was with father away in Carolina, . . . riding with the troop like she was a man" (93). Bayard doesn't say which "Carolina."

Unnamed Drugstore Clerk

The "youthful clerk" in the drug store who re-wraps the package that Joan dropped in the street also "star[es] at her boldly" (319). This ungallant action is the only detail we have to characterize him, although it is probably intended to reveal at least as much about Joan as the kind of woman who invites such behavior.

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