William Faulkner Criticism
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 1)
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 6)
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Faulkner, William (Vol. 14)
- Introduction
- John T. Irwin
- Realist and Regionalist
- The Self-Parodic Context of Faulkner's Nobel Prize Speech
- A Wheel within a Wheel: Fusion of Form and Content in Faulkner's 'As I Lay Dying'
- The Narrative Frames in 'Absalom, Absalom!': Faulkner's Involuted Commentary on Art
- From Yoknapatawpha to the World: Faulkner's Gothic Bequest
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 11)
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 9)
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 3)
- Faulkner, William (Vol. 18)
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Faulkner, William (Cuthbert)
- Introduction
- William Faulkner (The Moralist with a Corn Cob)
- The Rhetoric and the Agony
- William Faulkner
- The Achievement of William Faulkner
- Introduction: Faulkner, Past and Present
- Arthur F. Kinney
- Faulkner, Criticism, and High Fashion
- Faulkner Was Wrong about 'Sanctuary'
- Hate, Greed, Lust and Doom
- William Faulkner: First Encounters
- Faulkner, William (Literary Masters)
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Faulkner, William (Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- The Mirror, the Lamp, and the Bed: Faulkner and the Modernists
- Faulkner's Early Narrative Technique and Flags in the Dust
- The Ironies of Transcendent Love in Faulkner's The Wild Palms
- A Fable: Faulkner's Revision of Filial Conflict
- Diffusion of Information in The Sound and the Fury
- Reading Faulknerian Comedy: Humor and Honor in The Hamlet
- As I Lay Dying: Demise of Vision
- Faulkner and the Symbolist Novel
- ‘Pantaloon’: The Negro Anomaly at the Heart of Go Down, Moses.
- The Fate of Demonism in William Faulkner
- Androgyny in The Wild Palms: Variations on Light in August.
- The Autograph of Violence in Faulkner's Pylon
- Towards an Ethics of Reading Faulkner's Sanctuary
- Gender, War, and Cross-Dressing in The Unvanquished
- Her Shape, His Hand: The Spaces of African American Women in Go Down, Moses.
- Man in the Middle: Faulkner and the Southern White Moderate
- Culture in a Faulknerian Context
- Absence Absolute: The Recurring Pattern of Faulknerian Tragedy
- The Gothic Import of Faulkner's ‘Black Son’ in Light in August
- Class, Character, and Croppers: Faulkner's Snopeses and the Plight of the Sharecropper
- Further Reading