Literary Masterpiece Digest
The Sound and the Fury tells the story of the declining Compson family through four different perspectives, each revealing how memory and time shape reality. Instead of a linear narrative, the novel presents fragmented experiences, forcing readers to piece together the family's downfall. The first section follows Benjy, whose perception of time is disordered and emotional. Through his memories, we see his deep attachment to his sister Caddy, whose absence signals the beginning of the family's collapse. The second section centers on Quentin, who is obsessed with the past and unable to cope with change, particularly Caddy's loss of innocence. His struggle with time and memory leads him to despair and ultimately suicide. The third section is narrated by Jason, whose bitterness and selfishness reflect a more practical but emotionally empty response to the family's decline. He focuses on control and resentment, especially toward Caddy's daughter. The final section shifts to a third-person view, focusing on Dilsey, the family's servant, who represents endurance, faith, and continuity. While the Compsons fall apart, she remains steady, offering a contrast to their instability. The novel explores themes of time, memory, identity, family decline, and the loss of traditional values. Each character experiences reality differently, showing how perception shapes truth. Ultimately, the story reflects the struggle to find meaning in a fragmented and changing world.
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