Note:
This listing is provided as a guide to locate scholarly print resources
(typically books and articles) pertaining to Faulkner. Except in a few rare
instances, these resources are not freely available on the Internet. Some
resources may be available via subscription-based online databases, such as Ebscohost.
Because they are protected by copyright, none of the bibliographical resources
listed here are available online at this web site.
Blanco Outon, Cristina.
"La narrativa breve de William Faulkner: El tema de la soledad como
hilo conductor de 'Collected Stories' (The Short Stories of William
Faulkner: Solitude as a Guiding Theme in the 'Collected Stories.'" DAI
57.2 (Summer 1996): Item 1553C.
Boyd, Molly. "William
Faulkner’s 'Doctor Martino.'" Southern Quarterly 34.2 (Winter
1996): 39-49.
Bradford,
M. E. "The Anomaly of Faulkner’s World War I Stories." Mississippi
Quarterly 36 (Summer 1983): 243-61.
Brooks,
Cleanth. William
Faulkner: First Encounters (1983). 7-42.
Carothers,
James B. William Faulkner’s Short Stories. Ann Arbor: UMI
Research Press, 1985.
---.
"Faulkner’s Short Stories: 'And Now What's to Do.'" Fowler and
Abadie, New
Directions in Faulkner Studies (1984). 202-27.
Cohen, Philip. "Faulkner
and Racism: A Commentary on Arthur F. Kinney's 'Faulkner and
Racism.'" Connotations: a Journal for Critical Debate 5.1
(1995-1996): 108-18.
Dowling,
David. William Faulkner
(1989). 144-56.
Evans, Ron. "Faulkner’s
'Tomorrow.'" Explicator 56.2 (Winter 1998): 95-99.
Ferguson,
James. Faulkner’s Short Fiction. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P,
1991.
Grimwood,
Michael. Heart in
Conflict (1987). 35-62.
Ho, Wen-ching. "The
Caste Taboo in William Faulkner’s 'Elly' and 'Mountain Victory.'" Euramerica:
a Journal of European & American Studies 25.3 (September 1995):
1-24.
Jones,
Diane Brown. A Reader's Guide to the Short Stories of William
Faulkner. New York: G.K. Hall, 1994.
Karaganis, Joe.
"Negotiating the National Voice in Faulkner’s Late Work." Arizona
Quarterly 54.4 (Winter 1998)): 53-81.
Lahey, Michael E.
"Narcissa's Love Letters: Illicit Space and the Writing of Female
Identity in 'There Was a Queen.'" Faulkner and Gender.
Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha 1994. Eds. Donald M. Kartiganer and Ann J.
Abadie. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 1996. 160-80.
Matthews, John.
"Faulkner and the Culture Industry." The Cambridge Companion
to William Faulkner. Ed. Philip Weinstein. New York: Cambridge UP,
1995. 51-74.
Meindl, Dieter. "'Rose
of Lebanon' and the Faulkner Canon." Amerikastudien/American
Studies 42.4 (1997): 583-90.
Paddock, Lisa Olson. Contrapuntal
in Integration: A Study of Three Faulkner Short Story Volumes. San
Francisco: International Scholars Publications, 1998.
Sayre, Robert Woods.
"Artistic Self-Theft as Obsession and Creative Transformation: The
'Memphis' Stories and Beyond." Faulkner Journal 13.1-2 (Fall
1997-Spring 1998): 37-55.
Skei, Hans H. Reading
Faulkner’s Best Short Stories. Columbia: U of South Carolina P, 1999.
---.
William Faulkner: The Novelist as Short Story Writer. Oslo:
Universitetsforlaget; New York: Columbia U P, 1985.
---. William Faulkner, The
Short Story Career: An Outline of
Faulkner’s Short Story Writing from 1919 to 1962. Olso:
Universitetsforlaget ; New York: Columbia U P, 1981.
---, ed. William
Faulkner’s Short Fiction: An International Symposium.
Oslo: Solum Forlag, 1997.
Top of Page |