As I Lay Dying Anse's Characterization

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Following the story of the oddly behaved Bundren family, Anse Bundren is able to disguise his selfish desire to go to town with the promise of delivering his wife’s corpse to her desired cemetery. Throughout Faulkner’s novel As I Lay Dying, Anse’s actions, thoughts, and attitude are expressed through Faulkner’s use of characterization to help the reader uncover Anse’s motivation. Expressing through Anse’s attitude towards his children and dialogue with other characters, Faulkner gives readers parts of Anse’s character and how he causes a setback to each character and is not involved in any of their personal lives. Towards the beginning of the novel, Faulkner’s first major detail about Anse’s character is revealed. “Anse keeps on rubbing his knees,” (29). …show more content…

Having nothing to do, he continuously rubs his knees, possibly as a way to keep his hands busy while not picking up a finger to help. Additionally, the reader is able to infer that Anse likes the power he has as head of the Bundren family and uses it as an excuse not to do any physical labor, taking money from his own children. Not doing any labor to provide for family as much as he potentially could exposes his laziness and selfishness as he’d rather just stand and have others work for him. Having no remorse for not contributing and allowing others to do all the work is a recurring theme in Anse’s attitude. In the novel, Anse is motivated to make it to town so that he is able to get himself a new pair of teeth. Since Anse’s house is a long distance from the city, he had no excuse to go to town, especially with the family's limited amount of disposable income. Using Addie’s death and the promise he made to bury her in Jefferson, Anse was able to use that trip into town as an opportunity to get what he wanted. ”’God’s will be done,’ he says, ‘Now I can get them to the teeth,’”

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