Faulkner tapes reveal the man and his times
Mid-century reel-to-reel recordings transferred online
Last Updated: Tuesday, July 27, 2010 | 8:54 AM ET
The Associated Press
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Recordings made by William Faulkner, seen in 1950 at his Rowan Oaks home near Oxford, Miss., are now online and people can hear him discuss his work and that of other authors. (Associated Press)William Faulkner wrote detailed portraits of life in Mississippi's fictional Yoknapatawpha County, often using long, winding sentences in densely packed paragraphs.
Newly available recordings at the University of Virginia allow people to hear Faulkner's soft drawl, and listen to him talk about his writing, his career and current events.
Listeners can also hear him explain to students how to pronounce "Yoknapatawpha (yok-nuh-puh-TAW'-fuh)," the setting for several of his works, including The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying and Absalom, Absalom!
Faulkner spent 1957 and 1958 as the school's first writer-in-residence, giving lectures and readings and chatting with students and members of the community. Two professors at the Charlottesville school recorded his talks on reel-to-reel tapes, and after a 15-year effort led by English professor Stephen Railton, the result is now online.
Winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1949 and his first Pulitzer Prize in 1955 for his novel A Fable (he won his second posthumously in 1963 for The Reivers) thrust the shy and largely reclusive writer into the public eye.
The university recordings show that Faulkner took pleasure in reaching a wider audience, Railton said in a recent interview.
"I think he's come to see that the artist needs to be in contact with the larger public," he said. "It's good for the art and good for the public."
Searchable audio segments
Faulkner at Virginia: An Audio Archive contains about 28 hours of the author's speeches, readings of his works and his answers to more than 1,400 questions. All the audio is transcribed and presented in small segments that are searchable by keyword, and users are able to bookmark specific clips.
While Faulkner is gracious and candid in answering audience questions, he is sometimes unwilling to explicitly define the themes and ideas readers discovered in his books.
"I didn't know about all these things and so I'm quite interested to hear that they were in there," he tells one student. "They must've been in there for people to find them."
Faulkner didn't want to come between his writing and the readers; he wanted them to interpret stories on their own, Railton said.
Shares opinion on other works
He also discusses other writers' works, admiring Ernest Hemingway and telling students that he sympathizes with the alienation felt by Holden Caufield, the narrator of J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye.
Of Tennessee Williams, he says Cat on a Hot Tin Roof focused on the wrong characters: "The story was the old man's story," he says. "I think that the anguishes of children ain't worth three acts."
Advances in technology have made it possible to give more depth to American literature, said Railton, who has also compiled digital collections of Mark Twain and the role of Uncle Tom's Cabin in American culture.
And he and others hope that hearing Faulkner will inspire people to read Faulkner.
"This is where I want people to end up, lost in Faulkner's fiction," Railton said. "When they read the books, it'll mean more."
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