Go Down, Moses is a collection of seven related pieces of short fiction by American author William Faulkner, sometimes considered a novel. The most prominent character and unifying voice is that of Isaac McCaslin, "Uncle Ike", who will live to be an old man; "uncle to half a county and father to no one." Though originally considered (by the public) a collection of short stories, Faulkner insisted in his later years that the book was truly a novel. Although originally published in 1942 as Go Down, Moses and Other Stories (apparently against the desires of the author) Go Down, Moses may be considered a unified, though fragmented, novel. (Faulkner received editorial help from H.L. Mencken.) It spans more than a century in the history of the McCaslin family, viewing their hardships and triumphs by examining their daily lives. Its plantation and the fictional Yoknapatawpha County are in Mississippi. It deals with such issues as slavery and race, the relationship between man and nature, the vanishing wilderness, stewardship versus ownership of land, and property and inheritance.The title refers to the spiritual "Go Down Moses", which draws a comparison between the enslavement of blacks in America and the Jews in Egypt, as is evidenced by Molly(Mollie) Beauchamp's comments in the final story, where she repeats that her grandson has been "sold to pharaoh". Also not coincidentally, Go Down, Moses is possibly Faulkner's most spiritual book, as shown in the connection to nature and the land in "The Old People", "The Bear", and "Delta Autumn"."The Bear" is also one of Faulkner's best-known short stories.
Clasificación decimal de Dewey
813/.54 20
LCC (Clasificación de la librería del congreso)
PS3511.A86 G58 1990
Número de páginas
383
OCLC (Servicio Online de bibliotecas)
21562002
Aipatu
0