|
Books for sale at
The following books listed in this
bibliography are available for purchase online, or you may use the
ISBN to order it from your local bookstore:
Brooks, Cleanth
William Faulkner: Toward Yoknapatawpha and
Beyond
ISBN: 0807116025
Urgo, Joseph
Faulkners Apocrypha: A Fable, Snopes,
and the Spirit of Human Rebellion
ISBN: 0878054049
|
|
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,
JSTOR, Literature
Online, Project MUSE, and netLibrary,
to name just a few. Check with your local library for availability. Because they
are protected by copyright, none of the bibliographical resources listed here
are available online at this web site.
|
Brooks, Cleanth. “Man’s
Fate and Man’s Hope (A Fable).” William
Faulkner: Toward Yoknapatawpha and Beyond. Baton Rouge:
Louisiana State UP, 1978.
Butterworth,
Nancy. Annotations to William Faulkner’s A Fable.
William Faulkner, Annotations
to the Novels Series. New York: Garland, 1989.
Matthews, Bobby Lynn. “Faulkner, Truth,
and the Artist’s Directive: A Reading of A Fable.”
DAI 52.9 (March 1992): 3284A.
Polk, Noel. “Polysyllabic and Verbless
Patriotic Nonsense’: Faulkner at Midcentury—His and
Ours.” Faulkner and Ideology. Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha
1992. Eds. Donald M. Kartiganer and Ann J. Abadie. Jackson: UP of
Mississippi, 1995. 297-328.
Prampolini, Gaetano. “Le traduzioni di The
Mansion e A Fable.” Le traduzioni italiane di William
Faulkner. Ed. Sergio Perosa. Venice, Italy: Istituto Veneto
di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, 1998. 141-55.
Urgo, Joseph R. “Conceiving the Enemy: The
Rituals of War in Faulkners A Fable.” Faulkner
Studies 1. 2 (September 1992): 1-19
---. Faulkner’s
Apocrypha: A Fable, Snopes, and the Spirit of Human Rebellion.
Jackson: UP Mississippi, 1989.
Wadlington, Warwick. “Doing What Comes Culturally:
Collective Action and the Discourse of Belief in Faulkner and Nathanael
West.” Faulkner, His Contemporaries, and His Posterity.
Ed. Waldemar Zacharasiewicz. Tubingen: Francke, 1993. 245-52.
Top of Page |