A Rose For Emily Rhetorical Analysis

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Page 1 of 2 ZOOM In “A Rose For Emily” it begins with the announcement of the death of a lady named Emily Grierson, an alienated spinster that stays in the South in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century. The narrator that speaks in the “we” voice and also appears to represent a lot of people in the town, tells us the story of Emily’s life as a lonely and poor women who left penniless by her father, who drove away suitors from his overprotected daughter. Emily was alone after her father died with a large, dilapidated house, into which the townspeople have never been invited, and there’s an almost an amazing interest among them when they are finally able to enter the house upon Emily’s death. After that point they discovered the truth …show more content…

She has kept the body of her lover, a Northerner named Homer Barron, locked in a bedroom since she killed him years before, and she has continued to sleep with him. Many people have focused on Emily’s attempts to stop time by confusing the past with the present and refusing to attempt change; similarity, the events in the story has been a subject of the great debate in a way. Both we’re interpreted as symbolic of the American South’s inability to move forward along with the industrialized North after the Civil War. Another analysis finds Emily to be a tragic figure, because of her staunch. Individualism and the probing and judgemental speculations of the townspeople. Still other critics trace the story’s significance to Gothic and Horror literature going back to Edgar Allen Poe. Although “A Rose For Emily” is one of Faulkner’s best-known stories, it has not generally been considered his best achievement in short fiction. In fact, some critics initially accused Faulkner of writing a

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