Wednesday, June 3, 2020
Semantics and Modes of Communication in As I Lay Dying - Literature Essay Samples
At the crux of Faulkners As I Lay Dying is the issue of communication. The characters methods of communicating are many and vary, in some cases, depending upon the characters relationships with one another. Verbal communication is curt and generally without special significance; the very value of words ââ¬â the vehicle by which verbal communication moves ââ¬â is called into question both explicitly and through Faulkners nuanced semantic games. As a counterpoint to the potentially problematic mode of verbal communication, more esoteric and pure forms are postulated: Darl and Dewey Dell are able to communicate notions and facts without words in something akin to telepathy; looks reveal undiluted emotional truth, and characters are occasionally able, through gaze alone, to see very profoundly into those who surround them. The question becomes: How does the novel ultimately reconcile these differing modes of communication and what light does this reconciliation shed on words and communication at large, in the world?Conversation is infrequently used to express anything of substance in As I Lay Dying, rather it is relegated to the realm of the banal and practical. When the local men convene on the Bundrens porch the day of Addies funeral, they speak not of Addies death or of the futility of Anses proposed journey to Jefferson, but of the weather and of Cashs fall: ââ¬Å"You feeling this weather, aint you? Armstid says,â⬠ââ¬Å"A fellow can sho slip quick on wet planks, Quick saysâ⬠(90). This banter is vacuous and uninteresting even to those engaged in it. Faulkner counterpoints that which is spoken aloud with alternate italicized text representative of what the speaker would like to have expressed. Tull marvels ââ¬â mentally ââ¬â at Anses foolishness in insisting on waiting for Darl and Jewel to return with the Bundren team and not instead borrowing Tulls and setting off to Jefferson days sooner, before the route had flooded: ââ¬Å" [Add ie] laid there for three days in that box, waiting for Darl and Jewelon the third day they got backand it already too lateââ¬â¢Take my team, Anse.ââ¬â¢ ââ¬ËWell wait for ourn. Shell want it soââ¬â¢ (92). It is as if there exists an understanding silently acknowledged by the characters that one should not speak aloud of such matters, for in doing so some misplaced sense of propriety would be violated; it is only appropriate to speak superficially of matters mundane and irrelevant. Alternately, Darl is given to frequent challenging and abstract interior musings, focusing heavily on matters of being. ââ¬Å"I dont know if I am or not,â⬠he says. ââ¬Å"Jewel knows he is, because he does not know that he does not know whether he is or notâ⬠(80). (To fully grasp his meaning, one may need to read such lines very carefully and/or more than once.) Darl is utilizing the only tool at his disposal to narrate his thoughts: semantic expression. His ruminations become grad ually more difficult to follow: he asserts that when one begins to fall asleep, he ââ¬Å"emptiesâ⬠himself of being. Darl concludes that because he is awake and has not emptied himself, ââ¬Å"I am isâ⬠(81). He says, ââ¬Å"Yet the wagon is, because when the wagon is was, Addie Bundren will not beâ⬠(80). The divers formulations of ââ¬Å"to beâ⬠that Darl here employs become so complicated and pregnant with meaning and double entendre that they cease to mean anything and become self-reflexive. The attention is as much on the transmutations of the verb as on its suggested meanings; one questions if indeed the meanings are not so abstract as to no longer have any worldly application or referent. Faulkner uses Darls penchant for metaphysical rumination to draw attention to words brittleness: the form of to be can only signify and suggest so much before falling wholly apart. For this reason, Darl is unable to very lucidly render his thoughts; language is his limit ation.Addie Bundren, the Bundren family matriarch, has a profound distrust of words. She is offended by words such as ââ¬Å"fearâ⬠, ââ¬Å"motherhoodâ⬠, ââ¬Å"prideâ⬠ââ¬â ââ¬Å"I knew that fear was invented by someone that had never had the fearâ⬠(172). The word itself is meaningless, a superfluity: all words, even love, are ââ¬Å"just a shape to fill a lackwhen the right time came, you wouldnt need a word for [love] anymore than for pride or fearâ⬠(172). She knew that Anse did not truly love her because he used the word. ââ¬Å"Loveâ⬠is a shape to fill a lack: Anse lacked the true feeling, the real sensation that love signified, and so he used the word in an attempt to disguise this; using the word is then, in effect, a mode of trickery. Addie and her son Cash, her first child, did not need to use the word ââ¬â the sensation was sufficiently meaningful. Her ideas about the naming ââ¬â wording ââ¬â of feelings and its inherent me aninglessness is comparable to her understanding of the names of human beings: Anses or Cashs or Darls name, once pondered for a time, melts away and becomes a shape, an empty container for the person whom it signifies ââ¬â this container devoid of meaning when divorced from its referent, and therefore without inherent meaning. ââ¬Å"It doesnt matter what they call them,â⬠Addie says (173). Samson, a man who gives shelter to the Bundrens for a night, thinks of a man he knows, MacCullum, yet whose first name he cannot recall: ââ¬Å"Durn it, the name is right on the tip of my tongueâ⬠(113). This is a man with whom he has ââ¬Å"traded off and on for twelve yearsâ⬠, whom he has known ââ¬Å"from a boy upâ⬠ââ¬â ââ¬Å"But durn if [he] can say his nameâ⬠(119). There is a disconnection between knowledge of the signified ââ¬â a living, breathing human being in this case ââ¬â and the signifier ââ¬â that human beings name: knowledge of the n ame does not necessarily indicate knowledge of the man, and by the same token one may know the man without knowing the name. The name is an abstraction, the concrete thing ââ¬â its human referent ââ¬â is the object of value and meaning.Because the characters of As I Lay Dying are hostile to language and names (things used to verbally communicate in the world), non-verbal communication is the preferred method by which feelings ââ¬â and secrets ââ¬â are expressed. ââ¬Å"I always kind of had a idea that [Darl] and Dewey Dell kind of knowed things betwixt them,â⬠Cash says. Darl knows that Dewey Dell has been impregnated, yet she has told no one. The novel posits that this type of communication has more value than verbal communication: the non-verbal, almost telepathic, connection that they use to communicate has consistent veracity where the information passed via verbal communication is subject to human error and general subjectivity. This mode bypasses issues of propriety and fear which might inspire attempts to occlude truth. Dewey Dell says: ââ¬Å"and then I saw Darl and he knew. He said he knew without the words like he told me that ma is going to die without words, and I knew he knew because if he had said he knew with the words I would not have believed that he had been there and saw usâ⬠(27). Dewey Dell affirms the telepathic communications authenticity. She only knows that Darl truly knows of her sexual encounter with Lafe and the subsequent pregnancy because of the wordless method by which he communicated it to her. She, like her mother, distrusts words; people can use words to lie and deceive. Her bond with Darl, however, supersedes such things as that: it is a sophisticated method of communication, not affected by human fallibility; it operates on a higher plane.The eye is a motif in As I Lay Dying; it is a vehicle for truthful non-verbal communication of impressions, thoughts, and feelings. Looks, star es, and flashes of life and color convey meaning more truthfully and holistically than does language. Nearly every page of the novel, regardless of who is narrating, is peppered with allusions to characters eyes: ââ¬Å"pale rigidity of his eyesâ⬠(128), ââ¬Å"his eyes fumblingâ⬠(132), ââ¬Å"her eyes, the life in them, rushing suddenly upon themâ⬠(48). Gaze has the power to reveal feeling in a distilled, simplified manner. Dewey Dell has specific reasons for needing to get to town and Samsons attempts to coerce Anse into giving up the trip infuriate her: ââ¬Å"and then I found that girl watching me. If her eyes had a been pistols, I wouldnt be talking nowâ⬠(115). ââ¬Å"I sholy hadnt done nothing to her that I knowed,â⬠Samson says; though he cannot locate why her gaze projects such anger, her eyes betray absolutely her feelings.Darls eyes ââ¬â his gaze ââ¬â Tull theorizes, are what ââ¬Å"makes folks talkâ⬠about him; they are true culpri t of his attaining the status of ââ¬Å"otherâ⬠within the community. ââ¬Å"I always say it aint never been what he done so much or said or anything so much as how he looks at youâ⬠(125). Darls gaze then has communicated something to those with whom he has come in contact, some part of himself has become evident through his mode of looking. What is communicated, however, is unexpected and unsettling. The eyes are the window into a person, the space through which one must pass to access another human being; therefore, the significance of the look in As I Lay Dying is immense. Through their respective gazes, Darl and Cash are able to connect in this way: ââ¬Å"he and I look at one another with long probing looks, looks that plunge unimpeded through one anothers eyes and into the ultimate secret place where for an instant [we] crouch flagrant and unabashedalert and secret and without shameâ⬠(142). The two are ââ¬Å"without shameâ⬠in this instant; they are in supernatural and complete communication ââ¬â a communication in which words play no part ââ¬â and they achieve a kind of peace through it. Tull says that Darls way of looking is ââ¬Å"like he had got into the inside of you, somewayâ⬠(125). What is unsettling then is that the person being seen will enter into a kind of unwilling (and unfamiliar) communication in which Darl is able to see and understand that individual in a, perhaps, disturbingly complete way. Language is an imperfect means of expression: under its strictures, emotions and human beings are reduced to abstract signs (words and names, respectively) and complicated ideas are often unable to be properly brought to fruition, the shallow signs collapsing under the weight of the ideas levels and nuances. The people who populate the novel (the Bundrens, the Tulls, the various neighbors and others) do not have great respect for the spoken work, their conversations reflecting this in their terseness and general i rrelevance. The characters instinct is that it is inappropriate to speak of certain things in certain contexts (this sense of propriety part of a unique code of American Southern cultural mores that Faulkner draws on) and, even with command of and will to use language, for certain things it is flatly insufficient. To counterpoint the reductive and faulty mode of conventional verbal communication, other marginal modes of expression, modes bordering on the supernatural in some cases, are presented. Holistic and perfect modes of communication ââ¬â Darls beyond-human telepathy ââ¬â do not exist in reality; human beings in the world face the same communicative problems as do the characters in As I Lay Dying. Darl, the one character who mastered the esoteric art of ââ¬Å"[getting] into the insideâ⬠of people and communicating in a pure non-semantic manner, is in the end institutionalized ââ¬â his mode of seeing the world too provocative and upsetting. And despite being o ccasionally abetted by the undiluted truth in an involuntary gaze or flash in ones eye, the remaining characters must ââ¬â as all human beings must ââ¬â cope with the imperfect, human modes of communication, modes stifled by issues such as shame, propriety, and subjectivity; however, an attempt must also be made to exploit as fully as possible these limiting communicative modes ââ¬â as Faulkner has ââ¬â in the hopes of revealing some kind of fundamental truth.
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