How (and why) to read William Faulkner - Sascha Morrell

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2023
  • Get to know the works of William Faulkner, whose inventive literature made him one of America’s most remarkable writers.
    --
    William Faulkner is considered one of America’s most remarkable and perplexing writers. He confused his audience intentionally, using complex sentences, unreliable narrators, and outlandish imagery. His body of work is shocking, inventive, hilarious, and challenging. So how can readers navigate his literary labyrinths? Sascha Morrell explains how to read one of literature's most confusing writers.
    Lesson by Sascha Morrell, directed by Naghmeh Farzaneh, Sarah Saidan.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 163

  • @SearchOfSelf
    @SearchOfSelf Рік тому +417

    Faulkner's literary labyrinths are like mirrors reflecting our own biases and blindspots, forcing us to confront the complexities of history and memory 📖

    • @custos3249
      @custos3249 Рік тому +11

      Meh. If you come at his novels already from a position of psychology, he's not really that pivotal or eye opening. But what do I know? My mother is a fish.

    • @ForecieYT
      @ForecieYT Рік тому +3

      interesting

    • @SearchOfSelf
      @SearchOfSelf Рік тому +5

      @@custos3249 That might be true, but there definitely is something special about Faulkner's writing that sets it apart for sure.

  • @Anarcath
    @Anarcath Рік тому +87

    Getting to the last word of the 1288 word long sentence leaves you breathless, as if you just ran a marathon, chasing meaning and never catching it.

  • @Merrypaws
    @Merrypaws Рік тому +461

    If I recall correctly, Faulkner once dissed Ernest Hemingway by saying "He's never been known to use a word that would send a reader to the dictionary."
    To which Hemingway replied: "Poor Faulkner. He thinks that big emotion comes from big words."
    I find it interesting because both of them are now considered some of the greatest juggernauts of literature, but they approached the craft from polar opposite directions.

    • @sir_albaxious1909
      @sir_albaxious1909 Рік тому +4

      Lol

    • @nathanlevesque7812
      @nathanlevesque7812 Рік тому +11

      They're both overrated

    • @malachickisawesome
      @malachickisawesome 11 місяців тому +41

      @@nathanlevesque7812edgy

    • @smokemystogies9063
      @smokemystogies9063 11 місяців тому +4

      The more complex language only serves as a conduit to properly, moreso to more fittingly deliver your message, you can do the majority all with simple words but sometimes more learned words are the only things that can properly convey what you're trying to say. Just different styles of writing between the two, Faulkner just tackled things more complexly, complex in no way equates to good either

    • @Royse-zm
      @Royse-zm 11 місяців тому +1

      Even during an interview of The Paris Review Hemingway mentioned conflicts with Faulkner (if i recall correctly)😂

  • @harshalbhanarkar
    @harshalbhanarkar Рік тому +218

    Please do more such literature videos, I love these videos ❤

  • @aestheticbitch6509
    @aestheticbitch6509 Рік тому +153

    The fact that every animation is in the highest level. Respect to the animator. Hahahha

  • @jwcarnal
    @jwcarnal Рік тому +38

    I read two Faulkner novels when 18 or 19 while attending a technical college. I wasn't an avid reader back then but in an attempt to broaden my outlook on life I slogged through the first novel telling myself maybe I'll absorb its greatness mostly with my subconscious mind because I sure couldn't understand most of it most of the time. Closing the book after reading the last sentence on the last page I could not honestly say I understood what it was about. I had a general idea of time and place and events but nothing I could explain to anyone to demonstrate my understanding. If this was Great Literature I thought to myself "I guess I'll just have to miss out on that portion of intellectual life." Faulkner is a Southern writer. I was raised in the South and was attending a Southern university. And my English literature professor kept bringing his name up when discussing American literature so... After several months had passed I read the novel again. It was one of the most remarkable experiences in my life. Those reread words now conveyed me into the lives of the characters not as an observer but as one experiencing what the characters were experiencing as to perceptions and emotional reactions to those perceptions. Great literature indeed. The same sequence was need for the second novel as well. Time consuming but well worth it.

    • @didarul-alam
      @didarul-alam Рік тому +1

      As beginer which book should i start with?

    • @Suhrevardi
      @Suhrevardi 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@didarul-alam I started with Absalom, Absalom. It is considered his best work and I think it's the best place to start. The first chapter of The Sound and the Fury is very frustrating if you are unfamiliar with Faulkner's style. As I Lay Dying changes perspective each chapter and so it becomes difficult to gain a handle on the rhythm of the style. So I suggest Absalom, Absalom - just read it slowly until you get used to the style.

  • @asankajayaweera7212
    @asankajayaweera7212 Рік тому +116

    Thanks for introducing a new writer to my reading world. Because of one of your videos, I read Toni Morrison's Beloved which astonishingly painful. So I will definitely read William's books too.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Рік тому +72

    We appreciate videos like this. They're insightful.

  • @ronkirk5099
    @ronkirk5099 Рік тому +66

    I was raised a left coast liberal so I knew little about the deep south, but when I went on to read at least half a dozen of Faulkner's classic novels, I learned not only something about the south, but something about the human condition as well. A pretty great writer with a remarkable body of work. Highly recommended.

  • @normicall
    @normicall Рік тому +46

    More of these literature videos please - it’s been a while

  • @ZachGatesHere
    @ZachGatesHere Рік тому +6

    "Poor Faulkner, does he think big emotions come from big words?" - Ernest Hemingway

  • @coolskeleton_95_
    @coolskeleton_95_ Рік тому +12

    This is interesting. Fully explains why I constantly get confused throughout his works. Very through explanation!

  • @derekmayers-louther
    @derekmayers-louther Рік тому +25

    He was very ahead of his time using The ideas of the sunken boat fallacy way before someone even started talking about those concepts

  • @hyperactive_atlas
    @hyperactive_atlas Рік тому +1

    I’ve been bingeing these videos all day
    perfect timing for a new upload

  • @goncalomba
    @goncalomba Рік тому +2

    Thrilled to see that TED ED literature videos are back! Unarguably, a public good 📖

  • @avinashkishore4067
    @avinashkishore4067 Рік тому +11

    A video of such nature about Clarice Lispector, a lesser known genius, must be made. The meditative nature of her work.

  • @AllCodyAllTheTime
    @AllCodyAllTheTime 4 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for this informative, and neatly-produced, presentation. .

  • @jamescolbourne8298
    @jamescolbourne8298 10 місяців тому +9

    I really recommend starting with as I lay dying or light in August, and then tackling sound and the fury or absalom, absalom! after. It can also help to look at something like sparknotes or shmoop after each chapter. He's definitely a challenging writer, but certainly one of the great ones.

  • @joelkirkpatrick5688
    @joelkirkpatrick5688 Рік тому +4

    Oooo, this looks like a great read! I love books that play with your mind and discuss difficult topics, with strange and interesting characters.

  • @theWZZA
    @theWZZA Рік тому +3

    The animation is top notch and on point 🏆

  • @ef5686
    @ef5686 Рік тому +5

    this video is outstanding visually and in it's overview.

  • @ibnarasayoub5220
    @ibnarasayoub5220 11 місяців тому

    extremely glad to see the "why you should read" videos back again !

  • @borntogazeintonightskies
    @borntogazeintonightskies Рік тому +3

    Nice. I actually recommended a "Why You Should Read William Faulkner" video 3 years ago when they did one for Edgar Allan Poe.
    Not saying I had anything to do with this. Just glad that it's a thing now.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Рік тому +3

    Love your videos!😊😊😊❤❤❤❤

  • @abhradas6433
    @abhradas6433 Рік тому +21

    After such a long time a literature video❤❤❤ please keep uploading on literature more!!!!! Love from India.

  • @XavierGuillaume
    @XavierGuillaume Рік тому +1

    Sounds good! I love unraveling difficult literature! Hardest book I read was probably Chaucer bc it was written in Middle English.

  • @Echo81Rumple83
    @Echo81Rumple83 Рік тому +8

    If I were made to read this in highschool, I would've flunked English so hard, it would've made reading Pet Semetary a lot easier for me (I only read about 80 pages out of the 600+ it has, and I was struggling with my fifth-grade reading-level impairment at the time).

  • @N7spectre117
    @N7spectre117 Рік тому +1

    Illustration for this video HAS to be added to the best of 2023 list!

  • @dqan7372
    @dqan7372 Рік тому +4

    Ugh. I think I need to go back to bed. I just spent a good five minutes researching one of literature's most confusing writers, Sascha Morrell, and wondering why I'd never heard of her books. Now that I know that it's really Faulkner the thumbnail totally makes sense. Couldn't see it before, though. Sometimes it pays to just hit 'play'.

  • @sydneyfromyoutube7604
    @sydneyfromyoutube7604 Рік тому +2

    Keep it up guys 💪😉

  • @amgm1996
    @amgm1996 Рік тому +3

    Very interesting

  • @beyondcomplex517
    @beyondcomplex517 Рік тому +1

    i love ted-ed's literature videos

  • @josephvaz5238
    @josephvaz5238 Рік тому

    I love this video so much

  • @basedigor
    @basedigor Рік тому +11

    Faulkner can be very difficult, but most of his work is not. I think Absalom is his greatest achievement but Sound/Fury and As I Lay Dying tend to get the most praise. This short video essay does anyone new to Faulkner no favors, as while some might look at his work through the prisms of "race" and "colonialism" (really ... really?) you'd be selling his work and your time short to take that approach imo (the basic contrast in his work is between planters versus merchants, country folk versus town folk). I'd recommend starting with Snopes Trilogy (The Hamlet, The Town, The Mansion) and if you like his style then start going through it chronologically when it was written. For Sound and the Fury, you might want to find a good reader's guide, because you will get lost very quickly (the caddy/Caddie action takes place in the first few pages, and it only gets more difficult from there). Enjoy - Faulkner and Melville are America's greatest sons of letters, but they take patience.

  • @justamanfromtaured6790
    @justamanfromtaured6790 Рік тому +1

    Please do more why you should read videos or literary videos

  • @ArchDudeify
    @ArchDudeify Рік тому

    Narrator, your voice is beautiful
    Excellent brief video

  • @writeon2593
    @writeon2593 Рік тому +6

    3:41 As someone who wrote a book report on a book which I disliked for often using run on sentences, this would be a nightmare. In the essay, to prove my point, I took the entire second sentence of the story, word for word, and typed it all up in MLA font. It took up half a page. The sentence you're talking about here would likely span multiple pages and lose me and the reader in its length.

    • @johnhall3570
      @johnhall3570 Рік тому +1

      Sounds like Henry James at his most verbose!

    • @johnhall3570
      @johnhall3570 Рік тому +2

      The only place you used to find sentences longer than Faulkner’s were at Alcatraz!

    • @writeon2593
      @writeon2593 Рік тому +1

      @@johnhall3570 No, it was actually a spanish autobiography. I can't recall the name of it, but it had a lot of mystery surrounding it as to who actually wrote it. I know, how can you have an autobiography in which you aren't sure who wrote it? Simply put, we don't know if it was actually a completely fictional story written from the perspective of a fictional character. Another option is that the events are accurate, but the writer wanted to be anonymous and wrote himself a pen name which was also used as the name of his protagonist. It was a really weird book, especially when I read it for the first time and couldn't fully translate what I read. I had to look up an english summary of the book and its chapters to actually understand what was going on.

    • @claudiasosagutierrez9742
      @claudiasosagutierrez9742 Рік тому

      ​@@writeon2593 is it "The Life of Lazarillo of Tormes"? It fits with your description but I could be wrong

    • @writeon2593
      @writeon2593 Рік тому

      @@claudiasosagutierrez9742 YES! Thank you! I couldn't remember the name for the life of me.

  • @optimizelife
    @optimizelife Рік тому

    Insightful, interesting

  • @pazgonthecynic159
    @pazgonthecynic159 Рік тому +3

    Bring back "Why you should read".

  • @arodvaz1955
    @arodvaz1955 9 місяців тому +1

    Faulkner tries one's patience but is incredibly rewarding.

  • @nancyM1313
    @nancyM1313 Рік тому

    thank you Very much🎭

  • @Englishliterature3
    @Englishliterature3 Рік тому +2

    Do more literature videos, thanks

  • @mecahhannah
    @mecahhannah Рік тому

    Awesome thanks

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever Рік тому +1

    Still on my todo-list.

  • @scavenger_of_human_sorrow9272
    @scavenger_of_human_sorrow9272 9 місяців тому +1

    The best place to start with Faulkner is, in my opinion, "As I lay Dying", as it is, for one, not that long, and also offers a rather simple narrative.

  • @kristibualli5430
    @kristibualli5430 Рік тому

    That music! ❤

  • @Craw1011
    @Craw1011 11 місяців тому

    These videos are always such a delight. If you're at all interested in requests I would love to see a video done on Pynchon!

  • @HA-Ntuli
    @HA-Ntuli Рік тому

    Even some recent scientific literature is confusing because of how authors deliver the message

  • @mrmoose1985
    @mrmoose1985 Рік тому +8

    Have you guys done an explanation of why James Joyce is difficult to read because I was trying Dubliners the other day and it’s okay

    • @derekmayers-louther
      @derekmayers-louther Рік тому

      They have a video on Ulyesses

    • @jakealhalabi8194
      @jakealhalabi8194 Рік тому

      Try reading chapter 1 of Ulysses, so many little references encompassed in 10 pages that you need an annotated edition just to not get confused

    • @mrmoose1985
      @mrmoose1985 Рік тому

      @@jakealhalabi8194 oof
      So it’s like the historical references in classical novels

    • @mrmoose1985
      @mrmoose1985 Рік тому

      @@derekmayers-louther thanks

    • @leeeorama
      @leeeorama Рік тому

      You absolutely DON'T need annotations to enjoy Ulysses. The references to turn of the century Irish politics or aesthetic philosophy might not resonate with you, but it's also a fascinating and engrossing peek into the thoughts of its characters, not to mention frequently funny.

  • @Rhyno012345
    @Rhyno012345 Рік тому +3

    My senior year AP English teacher hated The Sound and the Fury and swore she would never require her students to read it; so I suppose it’s not for everyone.

  • @kenrivera1908
    @kenrivera1908 Рік тому +1

    @TED-ED
    Can you please do a video about Federico Garcia Lorca and his book la Casa de Bernarda Alba. It’s one of the most important works of spanish literature

  • @aaronpajuelo1963
    @aaronpajuelo1963 2 місяці тому

    gracias por la traducción

  • @nardineslaiwa7384
    @nardineslaiwa7384 Рік тому

    I like novels and poetry alot

  • @yacine_mkhlf
    @yacine_mkhlf Рік тому +2

    Do one on Finnegans Wake

  • @josepablomartinez-rendon9484
    @josepablomartinez-rendon9484 11 місяців тому

    You guys should do a video on Truman Capote and his works! 😊

  • @Shushus-cz9lk
    @Shushus-cz9lk 10 місяців тому

    My entire English reading class in college was Faulkner short story’s and first time I heard of him sadly but they are all good

  • @MYMOTHERISAFISH006
    @MYMOTHERISAFISH006 Рік тому +3

    As someone whose mother is a fish I approve.

  • @JustinFung2
    @JustinFung2 8 місяців тому +1

    Would love to know the song.

  • @halwestkawa5089
    @halwestkawa5089 Рік тому

    Create a playlist for videos about physics

  • @Propaganda9999
    @Propaganda9999 Рік тому +3

    What if he had no idea how to write books and was trolling everyone from the start

  • @cecilia08yeah
    @cecilia08yeah Рік тому +6

    My favorite short story from him is A Rose for Emily.

    • @casjean8904
      @casjean8904 Рік тому +2

      ah! so i have read something by him! college english.

  • @RS-md9ov
    @RS-md9ov Рік тому +1

    “At first I would not go because there might be something I could do and I would not go because there might be something I could do and I would have to haul her back.”- William Faulkner.

  • @J1P2K
    @J1P2K Рік тому

    I have issue reading the Sound and the Fury because of my reading problems.
    I had to use an audio book to just and try to follow along.

  • @kelvinbrito7334
    @kelvinbrito7334 Місяць тому

    ¡Hola! Este es seguramente el comentario que algunos de ustedes estaban esperando.
    Faulkner es ampliamente conocido y respetado entre los que sabemos de literatura (soy de Venezuela). Más aún, muchos escritores en nuestro idioma, como Mario Vargas Llosa, Gabriel García Márquez, Carlos Fuentes y Juan Carlos Onetti, entre otros, tienen una gran deuda con Faulkner y sus novelas.
    Empecé a leer “Santuario” y me gustó mucho la historia, aunque no me sentí preparado para comprenderla bien. Sinceramente, creo que necesito una guía de lectura para leer a Faulkner. Por eso abandoné esta gran novela, que espero retomar pronto.
    Hasta ahora, soy más team Hemingway que team Faulkner 😂 no puedo superar la prosa del natural de Illinois. Créanme cuando les digo que pasan muchas cosas en sus historias, solo que las pasamos por alto. Pero es sin lugar a dudas un gran cuentista. De él he leído “por quién doblan las campanas” y me pareció una novela con altibajos, pero el saldo final es positivo. Ahorita estoy leyendo “islas a la deriva” y me parece increíble, no puedo asimilar que sea una de las obras menos conocidas de Hemingway. Hay muchas frases y palabras sueltas en español en esa obra.
    Ambos eran grandes a su manera y a sus estilos 👏🏻 recomiendo las entrevistas de ambos publicadas en The Paris Review. Me contenta saber que existe mucho material escrito sobre Hemingway en nuestro idioma, incluso traducido, como la biografía de Anthony Burgess, pero casi no se encuentran estudios ni biografías sobre Faulkner. Creo que esa sí es una falta imperdonable.
    Me despido felicitándolos por el excelente video que han hecho 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 me han alegrado el día.

  • @justinpurser4736
    @justinpurser4736 Рік тому +1

    I enjoy the literature videos (as do so many others.) Please consider doing a series of videos on books of The Bible.

  • @fallenangelofoz8726
    @fallenangelofoz8726 Рік тому +16

    I had to read Faulkner in high school. It wasn't the dissonance of povs that made me not like him, it was his dry, dry tone. I remember falling asleep on the couch reading the Jason chapter of The Sound and the Fury for school because it was sooooo boring.

  • @1stfire_shadow
    @1stfire_shadow 2 місяці тому

    Is Sacha morell the name of the book?

  • @LovenArtiste
    @LovenArtiste Рік тому +1

    Which books of his would you guys recommend?

    • @themaestro2572
      @themaestro2572 Рік тому +1

      The Unvanquished. It's a coming-of-age story of Colonel Sartoris, a reoccurring character in Faulkner's stories, and his ascent into the social respect of Yoknapatawpha expectant to his station not just by birth but also his intellect, courage, and morality that exceed his fellow man.

    • @LovenArtiste
      @LovenArtiste Рік тому

      @@themaestro2572 Thank you for the recommendation as well as the description. It seems intriguing.

  • @alessandrojamesdelrosario8666
    @alessandrojamesdelrosario8666 9 місяців тому

    I want to suggest why you should read the Bronte sisters

  • @user-ps7vs4ke5p
    @user-ps7vs4ke5p Рік тому

    What are these books names

  • @user-vw8qb4lw2t
    @user-vw8qb4lw2t 11 місяців тому

    New book video plz!!
    "Heart of Darkness"!!

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena Рік тому

    Faulkner's works is what distinguishes himself from other literary geniuses

  • @SleightCreative
    @SleightCreative Рік тому +5

    My Mother Is a Fish

  • @deniserichards9337
    @deniserichards9337 Рік тому

    The Sound and tThe Fury has been sitting on my shed for so long ever since I saw the James Franco movie. I’m gonna give it an honest try.

  • @MsDaydream3r
    @MsDaydream3r Рік тому +1

    *VIDEO SUGGESTIONS:*
    Neil Gaiman
    Allen Moore
    Stephen King

  • @mdruhulaminsany993
    @mdruhulaminsany993 Рік тому

    Can you please make a video about "Man of destiny"

  • @HienNguyenHMN
    @HienNguyenHMN Рік тому +2

    "This is purposely confusing. You should read it."
    Uh... no thanks.

  • @sir_albaxious1909
    @sir_albaxious1909 Рік тому

    Reminds me of the Anime, Baccano!

  • @Bacon1108
    @Bacon1108 Рік тому +1

    cool

  • @126_md.naeimhossen2
    @126_md.naeimhossen2 Рік тому

    "Waste land" by T. S. Elliot please
    Or "A Passage to India" by E. M. Forster please

  • @souravhazra4460
    @souravhazra4460 11 місяців тому +1

    Gogol and Chekhov please! 😅

  • @Charlotte-Okkotsu
    @Charlotte-Okkotsu 3 місяці тому +1

    Believe me or not, im related to him not sure on the exact relation, but we share a last name, we lived in similar areas, and my parents also say we're related to them(16 btw)

  • @nemo4555
    @nemo4555 Рік тому +1

    You have to put a strobe warning for 00:53

  • @SelihomMedhanie-ls6tn
    @SelihomMedhanie-ls6tn Рік тому

    Thank you relly my life is true thesame

  • @ccooper8785
    @ccooper8785 Рік тому +1

    Meh, I'll wait until someone summarises the abridged edition of the Cliffsnotes....

  • @duongdisney
    @duongdisney 2 місяці тому

    I have to read 2 William Faulkner's novel books are the sound & the fury, light in August, but The Sound & The Fury is the hardest book to read

  • @nathanlevesque7812
    @nathanlevesque7812 Рік тому +1

    This Emperor's New Clothes are needlessly convoluted.

  • @tm43977
    @tm43977 Рік тому +1

    👍🏻👍🏻

  • @Cyb0rgd3ck3r
    @Cyb0rgd3ck3r Рік тому

    Faulkner seems SUPER worth it... for... someone else.

  • @user-ui9mj8hl3h
    @user-ui9mj8hl3h 10 місяців тому

    [등대 / 나동수]
    촌철 : 제가 어둠을 헤쳐갈 수 있었던 것은 당신이 있었기 때문입니다.
    활인 : 어머니는 자식들에게 하고 싶은 말은 많지만 꾹 참고 언제나 등대처럼 지켜봐 줍니다. 제가 이 암울한 세상을 겁 없이 헤쳐 나갈 수 있었던 것은 언제나 그 자리서 불을 비춰주는 당신이 있었기 때문입니다.

  • @Suhrevardi
    @Suhrevardi 10 місяців тому

    After all is said and done, Faulkner may be the greatest writer in the English language.

  • @sagarsondarva643
    @sagarsondarva643 11 місяців тому +2

    Same thing happened with me while reading Stephen King's DREAMCATCHER, at first and even more as story progresses, it's hard to tell what was dream and what was in reality. Only the parts where the word Mr. Grey used made me realise it was in the dream...

  • @Olleh-264
    @Olleh-264 Рік тому

    Hello

  • @ARedFeather
    @ARedFeather Рік тому

    Lets leave this for a few years... can barely get my head around the lord of the rings

  • @auro1986
    @auro1986 Рік тому +2

    this is why comic books were invented

  • @aaronpajuelo1963
    @aaronpajuelo1963 2 місяці тому

    sigue siendo pesado leerlo

  • @taktsing4969
    @taktsing4969 Рік тому +1

    like

  • @omega____
    @omega____ Рік тому

    Sup

  • @bhimsharma9226
    @bhimsharma9226 Рік тому +1

    With more stuff we more smart we become. That how our school system works . In early days of child life they consider if children read more and more , more smart they become. That how they destruct child`s life.

  • @name5876
    @name5876 Рік тому

    Sorry for commenting but I this is how I can communicate with a psycho who's been flooding my feed with violent content for a long time, many of which encourages suicide. Any recommendation? Anyone? I might not see replies because he turns off notifications, clears copyboard, deletes my comments... It's not a joke.