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irst major novel of William Faulkner, published in 1929. Set in Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County, Miss., in the early 20th century, the novel describes the decay and fall of the aristocratic Compson family, and, implicitly, of an entire social order,
from four different points of view. The first three sections are presented from the perspectives of the three Compson sons: Benjy, an "idiot"; Quentin, a suicidal Harvard freshman; and Jason, the eldest. Each section focuses primarily on a sister who has married and left home. The fourth section comments on the other three as the Compsons's black servants, whose chief virtue is their endurance, reveal the family's moral decline.
In this novel, Faulkner for the first time incorporated such challenging stylistic techniques as interior monologues and stream-of-consciousness narrative.
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