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Note:
This listing is provided as a guide to locate scholarly print resources (typically
books and articles) pertaining to Faulkner. Except in a few rare instances, these
resources are not freely available on the Internet. Some resources may be available
via subscription-based online databases, such as Ebscohost,
JSTOR, Literature
Online, Project MUSE, and netLibrary,
to name just a few. Check with your local library for availability. Because they
are protected by copyright, none of the bibliographical resources listed here
are available online at this web site.
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Arbeit, Marcel. “Coming
of Age in Faulkner’s The Reivers and Padgett Powell’s
Edisto.” Faulkner, His Contemporaries,
and His Posterity. Ed. Waldemar Zacharasiewicz. Tubingen: Francke,
1993. 276-83.
Brooks,
Cleanth. “The World of William Faulkner (The Reivers).”
William Faulkner:
The Yoknapatawpha Country (1963): 349-68.
Eyster, Kevin I. “Literary Folkloristics
and Faulkner’s Fiction.” DAI 52.5 (November 1991):
1746A-47A.
---. “The Personal Narrative in Fiction:
Faulkner’s The Reivers.” Western Folklore
51.1 (January 1992): 11-21.
Ownby, Ted. “The Snopes Trilogy and the
Emergence of Consumer Culture.” Faulkner and Ideology.
Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha 1992. Eds. Donald M. Kartiganer and Ann
J. Abadie. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 1995. 95-128.
Towner, Theresa M. “‘How Can a Black
Man Ask?’: Race and Self-Representation in Faulkner’s
Later Fiction.” Faulkner Journal 10.2 ( 1995): 3-21.
Vanderwerken,
David L. “Faulkner’s Anti-Bildungsromane.”
JASAT 25 (October 1994): 50-58.
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