The Curse on the Land -- Faulkner's Fallen South
"I think a man ought to do more than just repudiate. He should have been more affirmative instead of shunning people."
-- Faulkner on Ike McCaslin to Cynthis Grenier
-- Faulkner on Ike McCaslin to Cynthis Grenier
Faulkner's Three Ages for Yoknapatawpha County
Ancient Time -- Chickasaw Time -- a period of ancient and mystic dignity
The Anglo-Saxon Disruption -- Feudal slavery, late 17th century through Civil War
The Reconstruction to Modernity -- Poor White despoilers and the break-up of slavery
Several Assertions
- The land owns the people more than the people own the land.
- Land ownership is a kind of stewardship. It should not be passed from generation to generation.
- The curse on the land begins with Ikkemotubbe's selling of it to white settlers.
- The order of the Old South was unjust and therefore accursed. It contained its own nascent fall. It fell more from within than from without.
- Nonetheless, it did have some apprehension of the possibility of a true truth.
- Faulkner mourns the tragic, unjust nature of the Deep South.
- Yet he also rejects modernity and its destruction of community and tradition.
- Miscegenation is both an aspect of the South's injustice and a symbol of Faulkner's hope for racial reconciliation.
- "Blood" cannot be entirely avoided. It carries with it a heritage of wisdom and of sin.
- The curse cannot be easily removed. To repudiate it is not enough. One must counter it with love.