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A Rose For Emily

Submitted by liberate01 on November 13, 2007

Category: English
Words: 1241 | Pages: 5
Views: 207
Popularity Rank: 57,159
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Emily's Men
In "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner tells the life story of a woman who is a product of a life of dominating male influences, her father, Homer Barron and the men of her community. Emily is a very complex character and upon first glance seems to be on the brink of sanity. But after delving into the story much deeper one will find that she is very much a product of her environment. Throughout her life men have impacted Emily causing her to do things which gave the townspeople a misinterpreted perception of her mental state. The men in her life, her father, who remains ambiguously unnamed, her lover, Homer Barron, along with the town's mens comments, were the main agents in Emily's ever degenerative mental state.
Coming from a wealthy, upscale southern family, Emily was expected to walk the straight and narrow and abide by the rules governed to her. According to Renee Curry, "Emily daily refuses to participate in the symbol-making of her as a precious lady of the Old SouthÂ…" (411). In the South during the Post-Civil War era, a Southern Belle like Miss Emily was expected to attend social functions, mingling with women her age, building her social eloquence. This is a vital skill that every proper Southern lady should have acquired. Usually, the girls' mother would see to it that her daughter was properly educated in the Southern socialite ways.

Not having a mother to see to it she became a proper southern maiden, her father stepped in to parent her alone. Her father was very protective of his daughter and strict as well. She became very ridged and stiffened by the regiment he set about her. But the story only alludes to how strict he was saying that by the time she was thirty she was still not wed because of her fathers assumed refusal for all the suitors which presented themselves to the family (Faulkner 293). Even though one might think these types of actions taken by her father would cause disdain in Emily it...

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