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General Introduction: Light in August, Absalom, Absalom!, Go Down, Moses-Are About Fam

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General Introduction

nlike the novels of most of his high Modernist counterparts,


Faulkners greatest worksThe Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying,
Light in August, Absalom, Absalom!, Go Down, Mosesare about families, generations of Mississippi families, and, perhaps most of all, they are
about marriage, in its most inclusive sense. In current critical terms we
would say that the politics of racialized desire are central to Faulkners
imaginative vision. So, it is surprising that those politics in his life and
family history remain untraced. We have little sense of the relation of
Faulkner the Southerner, the son, lover, friend, husband, or parent to the
tortured marriages and love affairs in his fiction. Biographical assessments
of Faulkner and his actual world tell a great deal about the family patriarch, Colonel William C. Falkner, who died years before Williams birth,
but little about Callie Barr, Maud Falkner, and Estelle Oldham. These
three generations of North Mississippi women were alive when Faulkner
was and were at least as important as Colonel Falkner; they and their communities are heard across the entire spectrum of his imaginative domain.
Looked at together with the men and women to whom they are joined,
they can teach us much that is fresh and new about the art and craft of
Faulkners fiction.
Archival work, interviews, and new primary-source materials have further confirmed the rich reality of Faulkners relations with the three crucial
women I focus on. These different perspectives provide an unfamiliar view
of the artists inner life and his creative process. This view suggests strongly
that while his relations with both men and women naturally formed and
informed his vision of sexuality, his fictions of love and desire, his relations
with the women in and outside of his family, rather than his connections

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with a tenuous and questionable masculine ideal, shaped both his understanding of what it meant to love and his vision of what an artist and a
man could be.
Caroline (Callie) Barr, the black ex-slave who raised the artist from
infancy and later cared for the Faulkners daughter, Jill, lived with him in
the old shotgun cabin behind his antebellum house until her death, in 1940.
In past Faulkner biography and criticism, Callies only family is the Falkner
brothers, who called themselves her white children. My reconstruction
of her story, her postCivil War migration from South Carolina to Mississippi, supplemented with interviews of members of her own, black family,
substitutes reality and dimension for the Mammy tales of previous biographies.
Who was this articulate and bossy African American woman who two
generations of her employers children claim ran Mauds and then Estelles
households? Her stories spell-bound three generations of Falkner children. How do Faulkners competing and conflicted identifications with his
dark and light mothers, Callie and Maud, fuel his imaging of psychic
fragmentation, of desire, and of identity itself as fluid and tenuous? What
do the compulsively reiterated tropes of repulsion, shame, and desire, portrayed as seeing but not touching, or as touching only when coated with
dirt or mud, or as negro-rank smell, have to do with the politics of race
and sex in Faulkners fiction? Jill says that the women Pappy most loved
and admired were Granny, Mammy Callie, and Aunt Bama.1 Callie was
central to Mauds household, but of her relationship with Maud and, later,
Estelle, we know little. Nothing is written about Callies own family, though
her daughters lived within a days walk of Oxford and she had great nieces
in Freedman Town with whose mother she pieced her last wedding-ring
quilt. In her community she was loved and feared. In some ways she was as
much an outsider as Faulkner would choose to be in his. Faulkners Modernist novels tropes of loss have their genesis in his education into race by
his black and white mothers. These originary human connections, connections he never abandoned, inform the politics of race and gender in his
greatest fiction. Yet little or nothing is known about them.
We can caricature Faulkners mother, Maud Butler Falkner, as the little
old lady in size three Buster Browns, but that fails to illuminate. She was
certainly controlling and probably tough as shoe leather and mean as a
snake. However, these and other descriptions dont touch on the extent
and nature of her intelligence, her creative sensibilities, her iconoclasm, or
her quiet but withering wit. Nor do they explain the devotion of her sons
and women friends. She was reserved, austere, say some, but she was full
of life. Interviews reveal an intricate and tightly knit group of women with

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whom she played bridge, went driving (she preferred to drivenot be


driven), and attended the movies, which she loved, and the Memphis dog
races. She was passionate about her children and about literature. Her literary tastes were as eclectic as her famous sons: she read everything from
the classics to murder mysteries. When her young children were confined
by measles to a darkened room, she read to them, lying beneath one of
their beds with a lamp. In the year before she died, Mauds library borrowings included Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Chekov, and Turgenev. Her library
courier reported that she confided to him that her current bedtime favorite was The Caine Mutiny.2 Her daughter-in-law Louise Meadow said
Maud was reading Lady Chatterleys Lover in the bathtub when she had her
final stroke.3
Maud also loved to paint. Some of her late paintings still survive. How
did her imaginative and very visual perceptions of reality transmute to
Faulkners art? Both Maud and Callie passed on their strengths and weaknesses, passions and prejudices, to young Willie, as his mother first called
him. Together but apart, they educated him into his cultures Jim Crow
codes of white Southern masculinity and femininity. So did his father and
paternal grandfather. Alcohol played a prominent role in that education.
Despite Mauds and Callies deep apprehension and disapproval, Faulkner
began tippling before he was in his teens. Drinking as a trope for faux masculinity is embedded in his fiction. There, it also serves as an anodyne for
unbearable loss that cannot be mourned and a metaphor for total disorientation, paralysis, psychic numbness, and boundary dissolution.
Faulkners and Estelles families had known each other since at least
the 1870s: the two children became friends at age six. The Murry Falkners
and Lem Oldhams moved to Oxford and onto the same street within a
year of each other, and by 1908, if not earlier, the three oldest Falkner boys,
their cousin Sallie Murry Wilkins, and the two Oldham girls began running over those streets all night together and living only in the present.4 From early adolescence until at least 1929, Willie (later called Billy
and Bill) shared his writing with Estelle. From 1918 to 1924, while living in
American colonial enclaves in Hawaii and Shanghai, Estelle began to write
fiction that was, in part, her response to and revision of themes central to
the poetry Billy read to her and gave her during those years. Yet, unlike his
poetry, her stories embraced realism and social critique. Although she was
no Zelda Fitzgerald, her unpublished short tales are competently crafted,
humorous, sad, and particularly insightful on the Jim Crow world of the
pre- and postwar South and the casual racism of American Colonials in
Shanghai during the 1920s. When she first returned to Oxford with them
in late 1924, they became the basis for the continuation of an imaginative

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collaboration with Faulkner that led to his own sudden and remarkable artistic breakthrough in early 1925. Like her mother-in-law, Estelle was also a
visual artist. She had taken lessons in the early twenties while living in
Shanghai and continued painting until her marriage to Faulkner in 1929.
In 1962, after his death, she began painting again. In fascinating contrast to
her mother-in-laws professed realism, Estelles paintings were surreal and
impressionistic transformations of reality.
Unlike Mauds and Callies materially austere lives, Estelle Oldhams
world was rich in all variety of outward show. Shortly after her family
moved to Oxford in October 1903, they rented a large two-story house on
South Street. Two years later, Estelles father, Lem, bought a much more
showy Victorian home on the corner of South and Fillmore, just two blocks
away from Willies grandfathers Big Place. It was a house built for socializing, with a wrap-around porch, lovely gardens, and later, a tennis court.
The Oldhams were social snobs who claimed American ancestry as far
back as the Mayflower, a snobbery Estelle mocked in an autobiographical
short story she wrote in the 1920s.5 Lem Oldham owed his position as clerk
of the federal court of North Mississippi to his step-father-in-law, the wellknown Republican judge Henry C. Niles. Republicans were anathema in
Oxford, and while Judge Niles transcended the stench of Reconstruction
associated with that party in Mississippi, his son-in-law did not. Unlike his
father-in-law, Lem Oldham was a terrible businessman and was thus primarily dependent on the Republican Party for his income. The familys
social snobbery was often sniffed at in Oxford. It is a constant refrain
among the women who knew the family that Lida Oldham pushed Estelle. Jill says, I think that all of Nannys children were a disappointment
to herher only son dying in the flu epidemic, and the pretty daughter
[Victoria] who married well and then promptly died. And Ma-mawhom
they thought theyd married offand then she made a botch of it. And
then Aunt Dot [Dorothy Oldham] just generally making a botch of life.
That didnt please Nanny at all. Those children just didnt do what they
should have done. Nanny was very easy-going as far as I was concerned.
But I think she was extremely hard on her own children. There was not
much love lost between Nanny, Aunt Dot, and Ma-ma.
Lida Oldham worked by indirection: Nanny had the delightful habit
that seems to run in the familyof talking about people when they were in
the room. For example, Aunt Dot would be in the room and Nanny would
start discussing her in definitely uncomplimentary terms like, Isnt Dorothys hair-do terrible? or something unkind like that. She did that all the
time to both Ma-ma and Aunt Dot. But she never said anything mean or
ugly to them directly. It was just as though they were not there.6 Her

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mother could not complain about Estelles looks because her daughter was
always immaculately groomed. So instead shed criticize her for her housekeeping or for not being a dutiful daughter.
Lemuel Oldham was equally controlling in his own quiet way. He determined that Estelle would marry wellto a family that could trace ev
ery ancestor back a long time. In Mississippi particularly, family is important. And when Ma-ma was twelve or thirteen, Granddaddy and Nanny
started scouting the eligible families and decided which direction they intended Ma-ma to go. Marrying Cornell Franklin was strictly an arrangement between Granddaddy and Mr. Franklin.7
Faulkner chose to be an outsider. He had strong support from his
mother. In different ways, Estelles parents were outsiders too. And they
were not as wealthy as they seemed. Estelle spent nearly ten years in a
lonely, demanding, and unsatisfying marriage to her first husband, Cornell
Franklin. Financial, cultural, and familial constraints compelled her to stay
married until Cornell wanted a divorce. Then, with no independent income or family support, she attempted to support herself. She had begun
writing fiction, perhaps as early as nine years before her divorce. Evidence
indicates that she intended to sell it. Her extant short stories are as good as
much of the womens magazine fiction being published at the time. Estelle
was also an exquisite seamstress and loved this work. She often designed
her own and her daughters clothes, sewing without patterns. At least twice,
in the 1930s and 1940s, she adopted the profession of one of her own fictional protagonists, organizing showings of her gowns and using as models
students at Ole Miss and friends from Oxford and Memphis.8
Aside from their iconoclasm, Estelle and Maud seem totally unalike.
Yet, apparently, Faulkner needed both. He was neither nave nor young
when he and Estelle married in 1929. Despite much talk of divorce by both,
the marriage lasted. We have read about Faulkners infidelities, Estelles
hysteria, and her drug dependency. Viewing her as Disease and Faulkner
as Myth, we have effectively silenced both. Estelle is much more than
a spoiled Southern Belle, a part she played to the hilt when necessary.
Mama played up the clinging-vine Southern Belle business when required, but she was really the least clinging person Ive almost ever known,
observes the Faulkners daughter.9 Estelles life tells a great deal about her
husbands life and art.
In reconstructing these womens lives and reading Faulkners life and art
into the rich political, cultural, and emotional landscape their biographies
provide, I focus on three historical and biographical issues that directly inform Faulkners thematics and poetics. The first is Willies and Estelles ear-

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liest experiences with the black and white women who mothered them, in
what Anne Firor Scott, and others, have shown was a patriarchal but matrifocal world governed by apparently rigid racial and sexual hierarchies
and boundaries. Within their own families, however, these boundaries were
extraordinarily fluid. Both Estelles and Faulkners imaginative representations of racial and sexual relations reflect and comment on this conflicted
cultural discourse. Faulkner reveals an important part of its essence in an
early screen memory representing his two mothers. He recalls himself as
a three-year-old homesick child being carried through the night between
two women who simultaneously attract and repel him. One is dark, warm,
and sensual: she must have carried me. The other is blond, cold, and
aloof, but she was holding the lamp.10
This remarkable conflation of race and sexuality is a core fantasy that
fuels his imaginative visions of desire and loss from his early, handmade
and self-illustrated dream-play, The Marionettes (1920), to Go Down, Moses
(1942) and beyond. Often in his fiction, a tortured and torturing pierrotique
male lover merges these two images in one woman (as Joe Christmas does
with Joanna Burden in Light in August). In Absalom, Absalom! Faulkner invents
four generations of black and white brothers and sisters (races are literally
split and merged) to continue his fictive exploration into the meanings of
and relations between racism, gender, desire, and sexuality. Because this
splitting or doubling is a constant source of creative tension in his poetry
and fiction, it is worth looking at its extra-literary origins. From whom did
he learn to split and why? What are the implications in a culture where
white men and women say again and again that their black nurse was
my real mother? Faulkners changing relations with the women in his
family and other women in his life are reflected in the increasing complexity, dexterity, and brilliance with which he gives imaginative form to these
questions. My chapters on Caroline Barr and Go Down, Moses, the novel
Faulkner dedicated to her, explore these questions, as do those on Faulkners
and Estelles childhood and adult imaginative collaborations, which culminate with his second great creative breakthrough, The Sound and the Fury.
New evidence reveals that both Go Down, Moses and Faulkners first great
novel have a history and afterlife that also tries to capture, contain, and explain that loss. Throughout Faulkner and Love, I trace a pattern of multiple
splittings that he imposed on all the women he loved. Most vividly, Estelle
was both black and white, while their daughter was alternately Jill
and Bill.
The sense of impotencethe inability to create that Faulkners earliest
poetic personae experiencehas been explained as his creative response to
the loss of Estelle Oldham in April 1918, when she married Cornell Frank-

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lin and moved with him to Hawaii. Although that loss was doubtless a
precipitating event, we must look further back to understand both the formal and psychological implications of his ultimately triumphant fictional
blurring and merging of racialized gender distinctions, and the consummate ease with which he handles his polymorphous characters. Supportive
as they were, his two mothersone black and one whiteseem to have
been a source of his fears of artistic impotence. In a family headed and
supported by Faulkners inarticulate and hard-drinking father, these two
women, Maud and Caroline, controlled the word and, between them,
taught the young artist the power of language to cut or caress. They also
had little use for the grown men in their lives. Homophobia and Southern
codes of masculinity also worked against Faulkners choice of art as a vocation. In Oxford, only women and men like Stark Young and Ben Wasson
(both of whom were gay and had left Mississippi) attempted to be artists. In
this context it is important to remember that Faulkner was the Souths first
great novelist and that art in the South, particularly, was a sissified occupation. He really had no significant male models: the living storytellers and the
visual artists in his family were all women.
My second historical and biographical issue is the cultural and psychological role of alcohol in Estelles and Faulkners actual and imaginative
worlds, particularly its function in initiating and defining white Southern
masculinity, segregating the social lives of men and women, educating its
white children into the codes of Jim Crow, and in inuring them to sexual
and racial violence and child abuse. There is a relationship between alcoholism and Faulkners tropes of suicidal and homicidal violence, of sadism,
psychic numbness, and total dissolution of identity. We need to understand
why, in both Faulkners and Estelles fiction, there are so many scenes of
adolescents being forced by their elders to drink.11 We can then begin to
understand his and Estelles addiction as, in part, a cultural disease and a
legacy of slavery.
Of equal importance in exploring the relationships among creativity,
sexuality, and alcoholism is Faulkners recurring trope of Estelle Oldham as
the Fatal Dancer. Discussion of the Dancer includes Pierrot, her besotted
partner. The most interesting of his poems and poem sequences center on
these two central images of late romanticism, symbolism, and early Modernism. However, Faulkers original attraction to them did not stem merely
from their literary ancestry. Rather, these highly charged symbols of desire
draw their emotional power from the artists reality. I suggest that he chose
them, or they chose him, because they mirrored central aspects of his relations with women, but especially with Estelle Oldham. She once said that
although she never recognized any of Faulkners characters as herself, she

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had noted that her husbands more savage inventions often displayed some
of her worst qualities. This frank and insightful remark is characteristic of
the woman who has emerged from my research.
That Estelle Oldham was the seductive and exhibitionistic Dancer, and
Faulkner the voyeuristic and often sadistic Watcher, is well documented.
She was quintessentially theatrical and her theatricality played directly into
Faulkners. In his poetry and fiction, the dance (literal and figurative), often
coupled with alcohol, is always threatening. Pierrot and his fictional successors silence and literally still the Dancer in order to hear their own silent
music. In Faulkners fiction, such dances are always racialized and often
end in literal or psychological murder. One has only to recall Faulkners
jazzy collagelike dance scenes in Soldiers Pay, or Reds, Popeyes and Temple
Drakes, or Joe Christmass and Joanna Burdens, or Quentins and Caddys, or Quentins and Dirty Natalies carefully choreographed dances of
shame, hatred, and desire to recognize the incipient power of this early
vision.
The third issue is the relation between what I call collaborative fantasy,
Faulkners creativity, and his raced and gendered self-representations. The
historic difficulties and repercussions of defining oneself as an artist in Mississippi in the first third of the twentieth century were transmuted into
artin Faulkners fiction and in Estelles unpublished short stories. But each
paid a price for tampering with cultural mythologies: Estelle for rejecting
the Southern mystique of the ice maiden and attempting to alter her
image as the Southern Belle; Faulkner for tearing at the myths of Southern
Manhood and white supremacy epitomized in his self-naming as black
man and poet. What pleasures and dangers did Estelle and Faulkner share
as they experimented with self-representation in life and fiction in ways that
either flouted cultural structures governing race and gender or revealed
their hypocrisy?
Faulkner did not draw clear boundaries between his art and his life;
masking and theater define and shape his erotic relationships and his art.
In his poetry and fiction, masking as well as racial and gender transformations constantly attend the consciousness of characters who ask, in one way
or another, Who am I? In The Marionettes, Faulkners 1920 dream-play,
Pierrot woos Marietta in the guise of his shade, and, as I have shown in
Origins, Faulkners drawings of his heroine bear an uncanny resemblance to
photographs of Estelle Oldham, photographs taken shortly before and
early in her marriage to her first husband, Cornell Franklin. Thus masking
and theater figure prominently in one of Faulkners earliest imaginative
productions, which was, in part, a reworking of his already long relationship with Estelle Oldham. It is well known that Faulkner delighted in role-

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playing in his life as in his art. What is not common knowledge is that
hiswife joined him, that the two had acted together since childhood and
shared equally in an attendant love for costume, and that their private theater remained central to their marriage. It is this aspect of their relationship that I want to introduce here, because theater played a role in all of
his relationships and because it illustrates vividly one of the many ways
Faulkners marriage, contrary to popular conceptions, fueled his creativity.
Let me first sketch the outlines of that popular conception.
In Faulkner biography, Estelle Oldham is, to use one of Faulkners favoritepoetic adjectives, an opaque but negative and somewhat pitiful figure.
By all accounts, including Faulkners own, she is the millstone around the
great authors neck. Coming to him as used goods, she merely repeated the
role she had played with her first husband before they divorced in 1929.12
Faulkners letter to his editor Hal Smith asking to borrow five hundred dollars to finance his marriage establishes the basis for this interpretation. In
it, he claims dramatically that he is marrying because
[I] both want to and have to. this part is confidential. utterly. For
my honor and the sanityI believe lifeof a woman. This is not bunk;
neither am I being sucked in. We grew up together and I dont think she
could fool me in this way; that is, make me believe that her mental condition, her nerves, are this far gone. And no question of pregna[n]cy: that
would hardly move me: no one can face his own bastard with more equanimity than I, having had some practice. Neither is it a matter of a promise on my part; we have known one another long enough to pay no attention to our promises. Its a situation which I engendered and permitted to
ripen which has become unbearable, and I am tired of running from devilment I bring about. This sounds a little insane, but Im not in any shape
to write letters now. Ill explain it better when I see you.13

Note here the stagy quality of Faulkners cleverly balanced rhetoric, his
piling up of negatives, his hyperbolic exaggeration as, like one of his most
famous characters, Rosa Coldfield, he denies only to suggest and claims
toaccept blame only to shift charges of manipulation to his lover. I include
this letter because it conveys in Faulkners own words the accepted versionof why he and Estelle Oldham married and why, despite affairs with
which he taunted her, they remained married. Here is a typical descriptionof Oldhams state of mind shortly before her marriage to Faulkner:
[Faulkners] stalling and uncertainty [about whether to marry her] threw
Estelle into a panic. Unless he married her, how could she go on living
she, a 32-year-old divorcee with two children? A failure in the eyes of her

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family and friends, worse than that to the town at large? Without him she
felt she had nothing, was nothing. For the sake of her sanity, of her life, he
must marry her. She had no one else to turn to. Her nerves were gone, her
mind, too. He was her last hope.14
Here, as in all other biographies, she appears as the Southern Belle
gone bada caricature of failure, helplessness, and hysteria. In fact, the
role of Southern Belle was one Estelle assumed with apparent ease, when
it suited her purposes. Her daughter notes that she used it as a protectivescreen, very much like Pappy used his Im just a dirt farmer role.15
Note that Faulkner is also stereotyped, as a dutiful son and an honorable
Southern gentleman: Estelles frantic helplessness appealed to his sense of
honor.... Here was a chance to prove to his father and Major Oldham ...
that he was a man, not a wastrel.16 Such biographical fictions distort our
perceptions of Faulkner the person and Faulkner the artist. The author
has, for example, a history of seldom concerning himself with others opinions. That he would allow one of the most important decisions of his life to
be dictated by the opinions of two men he neither admired nor respected
seems far-fetched at best. But, perhaps most disturbingly, this portrait insists thatagain, according to this biographythere was a wall of irreconcilable difference between Faulkner and Estelle which made real intimacy impossible.17 Such a view persists in spite of the facts of a virtual
lifetime of mutual attachment that began when Willie and Estelle were six
or seven years old, was continued throughout Estelles eleven-year marriage to her first husband, and concluded with the Faulkners own thirtythree-year marriage. The deletion of all erotic and affectionate material
from surviving letters Faulkner wrote his wife from Hollywood and New
York in the 1930s and early 1940s in the published Selected Letters reinforces
such interpretations, especially in the light of Meta Carpenters memoir of
her affair with Faulkner during just those years. To suggest that Faulkner
spent his life with a woman with whom he had no real relationship debases
both partners.
But in virtually every portrayal of Estelle, her hysteria, her alcoholism,
her narcissism, her profligacy, her exhibitionism, and her stupidity are her
most commonly noted qualities. There is more to her than that.
Our interpretation of his letter to Hal Smith changes if, rather than
allowing ourselves to be seduced by its histrionics, we remember its intent
to get a loan, an advance on The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner will write many
of these letters to his various editors in the course of his life. In all of them
he presents himself similarly.18 Our interpretation also changes if we look
for the letters fictional parallels and read it as part rhetorical ploy and part

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11

practice arena for Faulkners fictions of love and desire. For besides being
rhetorically convincing, this letter is a shorthand version of some of the
most redundant and powerful images of desire in his novels. Like Joe
Christmas in Light in August or Jack Houston in The Hamlet, Faulkner, too, is
tired of running from his own devilment. Like Houston and his wife, Estelle Oldham and he have known each other forever.
In The Hamlet Faulkner elaborates on this fiction. There, Houston says
of his desire, It seemed to him that it had been in his life always, even between those five years between his birth and hers; ... that he himself had
not begun to exist until she was born, the two of them chained irrevocably
from that hour and onward forever. Like many of Faulkners tortured
men, Joe Christmass and Houstons organizing fantasy, or fiction of love,
fuses infancy and childhood with adult erotic desire: the woman he marries
has been in his life before he was born. Houston wants it all. But because
this fusion is incestuous, and therefore forbidden, his conscious response
must be to fight it. He sees himself chained not by love but by implacable
constancy and invincible repudiationon the one hand, that steadfast and
undismayable will to alter and improve and remake; on the other, that furious resistance (206).
Theater springing from the tension of yoking antitheses was as important to the structure of Faulkners love affairs as it was to the formal concerns of his poetry and fiction. One thinks of him in Hollywood in the
1930s insisting to his twenty-eight-year-old lover, Meta Carpenter, that she
wear hair ribbons like a teenager, as well as of Metas and other womens
comments that he was more passionate in letters than he ever was in the
flesh. Or of the nasty and transparent fiction he, Ben Wasson, and Meta
Carpenter performed for Estelle the summer of 1936, when Meta went to
dinner at the Faulkners Hollywood apartment as Ben Wassons date.19
There are dozens of examples; a brief reminiscence, Faulkner: A Flirtation, in the New York Times Magazine in 1987, provides a nice vignette of the
writer flirting with a young admirer. In this instance, he assumes the guise
of Januarius Jones, one of his earliest self-parodies.20 The Times essay aptly
illustrates Faulkners habit of almost immediately imposing his own fictional frame upon any potentially romantic relationship. During the ten
years he wrote poetry almost exclusively, his most favored persona was Pierrot, the quintessential masker. Cyrano de Bergerac, who wooed his true
love in the guise of another mans voice, was another of his favorite characters. Throughout his life he cribbed from Cyrano to woo a series of women,
including Helen Baird in the 1920s and Joan Williams and Jean Stein in the
1950s.21 In short, when we read Faulkners 1929 letter to his editor in the

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dual contexts of his erotic and aesthetic life, its meaning changes. The letters fictional drama and the practical function of that drama are revealed.
The Faulkners daughter, Jill, describes growing up in a household in which
masks were the order of the day:
Living with Ma-ma and Pappy was like living on a stage-set. Everybody
was playing a role. You never knew who was being what today. They
played roles to each other and, largely, I was left out of it. There was always lots of storming up and down the stairs and threats on my mothers
part to slash her wrists. She really liked playing tragic parts. They both
enjoyed it, and even I got to know it was not for real. But it was pretty exciting. The only time I touched base, you know, hit the ground in the real
world, was when I went to school. When I walked back through the gates
at Rowan Oak, it was like Alice going down the rabbit hole. I never knew
exactly what would be at the end of the hole when I reached my front
porch.... Pappy alwaysit would be hard for me to say that I could look
at him at one point and say, this is who he really is, because, almost always, he was playing a part. When I was young, it gave me a feeling of
unreality. I never knew whether I was real to them.22

As it had been in Estelles and Willies childhood games, costume was part
of this theater. When she grew older, Jill could often predict the tone and
theme of the evenings performance when she saw what her mother was
wearing as she came down to dinner:
When Ma-ma was getting ready to really have a major scene, she wore
major clothes for it.... If we were going to have a real confrontation
you know, My life is wasted, Ive been abusedthen it would usually be
something really elegant. If it were going to be a fairly smooth, uneventful
evening, it would just be an ordinary, decent type of dress. And then, if it
were going to be a Arent we all happy together in this nice little threesome here in the country sort of thing it wouldthere was just a difference in her dress that would fit that too. Life was never dull at Rowan
Oak. Pappy did the same thing. He liked to play the country squire but he
also liked to play the good ole boy with all the men from the fishing camp
or the hunting camp and he changed his clothes and his accent accordingly. To a certain extent Ma-ma was the same way.
So often what was said was said for effect, and so often the position that
was taken was taken for effect. It didnt really reflect anyones true feelings
on the matter. What Im really trying to say is that people had roles. Everyone hadthey were standing back and watching themselves play this particular part.23

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She also notes that both her parents enjoyed making grand gestures and
that they had a life of gestures together.24
Theater was not reserved for special occasions, however, and often entered into the daily routine. A friend of Jills loved to visit Rowan Oak because it was so much more interesting than any other home in town. It
was the atmosphereI always felt like they sort ofit was like a play,
maybe. Even a family meal at Rowan Oak was a performance:
Well, to me Mrs. Faulknershe was not the greatest housekeeper, but she
had a lot of flair. I mean you could have the simplest food but it would be
served up buffet on silver platters. It was just great. Nobodys mother ac
tually cooked. But she could cook when she wanted to. She was very inventive, very artistic with whatever she didcooking, gardening, sewing
she made beautiful clothes. It was a household that was so entirely different
from anything I knew. I enjoyed going down there so much. It was just
highly entertaining.

Jills friend makes the following comparison:


At our house, we ate in the dining room only for Sunday dinner and when
company came. Well, the Faulkners always ate in the dining roomexcept
for in the winter when everything was frozen as we didnt have any central
heating. But, no matter how simple the meal was, it was very elaborately
served. Mr. Faulkner was at one end and the plates were stacked and he
served the dinnerhe served the meal and everything, always. And even
if it were bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwiches, it would all be on silver
trays with the lettuce beautifully arranged. I thought it was the greatest. I
think they all enjoyed it.

Faulkners daughters comments about her parents reveal more similarities in her parents likes and dislikes than differences: My parents went
out of their way to make my friends feel welcomed, and they always enjoyed them. They both tried to be careful that none of my friends saw them
drinking. There were exceptions like the time when Pappy ruined my birthday.25
Estelle also told Jill and her friends stories she invented based on characters in Hawaiian folklore. Jill says: Ma-ma would weave fantastic tales
around them which we would mix in with our own remake of whatever
movie was playing at the matinee that week. Our main props, besides our
ponies, were the trees and grapevines in the garden at Rowan Oak. Wed
do a lot of climbing and swinging.26 Besides making up tales for her daughter, Estelle wrote some fiction of her own. In fact in the late 1920s, Faulkner
sent Scribners a coauthored story (originally Estelles), which they re-

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jected.27 There is also Estelles fictionalized memoir, Dr. Wohlenski. Deliberately autobiographical, it tells much about her feelings when, as an almost seven-year-old girl, she was just about to move from Kosciusko to
Oxford. In this story, she already privileges the imagination and sees herself as, therefore, different. After offering her good-night prayers, she is admonished for asking God to deliver me from playmates. Grown-ups
white and coloredwere far superior company (22). One reason she
prefers grown-ups is that they tell stories. These details about Estelle Oldham call into question biographers portrayals of her as a totally depen
dent lightweight whose greatest concerns were her clothes and her reputation in the community. Her daughter explains, Ma-ma would try to please
people she cared about or for a reason. But she really didnt care about
public opinion.28
Estelle Faulkner is supposed to have craved a more active social life.
Perhaps she did. Yet her daughter says, She wasnt interested in the activities of the other ladies clubs and bridge. She loved to fiddle around the
garden. She wasnt doing the gardening herself, but she was out there supervising and cutting flowers. I dont think there was ever a problem with
boredom as far as Ma-ma was concernednot at the beginning of her life
or at the end either. It was not a question of what I am going to do with
myself for the next hour because theres nothing I dont have to do. Time
was something she enjoyed.29 As for Estelles supposed neediness, again
her daughters comments suggest a kind of self-sufficiency, independence,
and strong sense of selfhood that is at odds with current biographical assessments:
She was ready to listen, always wanted to help. But if I didnt come with a
specific problem, she was perfectly willing to let me fend for myself. She
wasnt intrusive, but also she was very wrapped up in her own self and her
own thoughts. I was more important to her than anything else other than
Pappy. At the same time, she herself was very important to herself. I realized earlyand it probably saved me toothat I was not of primary importance to either one of them. You know, some people tend to forget that
there is a me. They are always concerned with other people. But she
wasnt. Its probably one of the reasons she and Pappy stayed together.30

To a newspaper reporter years after Faulkners death, in 1962, Estelle remarked, I have never been bored in my lifelonely, maybe, but never
bored.31 Along with her collaboration in Faulkners games, evidence
shows that her self-knowledge and self-sufficiency compelled his respect.
Although Rowan Oak may have been fun to visit, living there was
complicated. When it became too much, Jill could go to the cabin where,

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first, Caroline Barr and, later, other black women who cared for her lived:
It was sometimes a happier place to be. There was no feeling of tension
there. It was the difference between sitting under a nice cool shade tree and
sitting on top of a volcano.32 That dangerous tension their daughter experienced sustained and enlivened the Faulkners marriage, a point Summers
makes herself: Ma-ma and Pappy were two very different and difficult
people trying to coexist. They walked on tight-wires around each other,
and I walked an equally tight wire around the two of them. But I think they
both enjoyed it. I think I was the only one who felt uncomfortable. . . .
There was always the feeling that something was getting ready to happen.
Im trying to think if there was ever any time when life was simply there.
There wasnt. There were always undercurrents and just a feeling of tension. Theres no other way to describe it.33 Jills description of their marriage sounds eerily similar to her fathers fictional portrayals of obsession
and desire, particularly in Sanctuary and Light in August.
Further elaborating, she contrasts her mothers two husbands:
Judge Franklin was a delightful man, but pretty pedestrian. He had money,
he liked the things that money providedpolo ponies and steeple-chase
horses. But, despite all the places hed been and things hed done, he was
really pretty dull and predictable. I think that, as much as anything, caused
the problems between them, because Ma-ma didnt care for the pedestrian
aspects of any life. I think that because she enjoyed living, to some degree,
in a fantasy world. Because she didnt like the pedestrian aspects of any life
or thing, she completely enjoyed the sort of life she had with Pappy even
though it was difficult. Im not sure Pappy would have stayed married to
anyone else. He married an idea; he didnt marry a person.
Ma-ma was very good and so was Pappyif something was distasteful
or wasnt quite as it should be, they could simply not see it. I think moving
into Rowan Oak to begin with was something of a lark. It was a romantic
adventure and both of them liked that. For example if there was no electricity, theyd say Oh, isnt candlelight nice. There is no running water; a
bottle of wine on ice is better than water coming out of a tap. Thats what
Im trying to say about their fantasy world. And remember, everyone had
help.34

To say that the Faulkners marriage translated directly into his fiction (that
it was an instanceto use his own wordsof sublimating the actual to the
apocryphal) is simplistic. But their daughters observations on why her parents stayed married, despite much talk on both sides of divorce and desertion, give one a sense that it was a stimulating relationship for both partners.35 In many respects, Faulkner very consciously used the tension and

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theater in his marriage for imaginative experimenting. His marriage and


love affairs, even his relationship with his daughter, functioned somewhat
like his role-playing.
Exploring further the tension she experienced, Jill Summers says, Mama herself was not a tense, uptight person. I think a lot of people got the
impression that she was a little high-strung and tense. I dont really think
she was. I think that the tension that Im talking about was between her
and Pappy, and in a situation where the two of them were involved. But
Idont think that she, herself, was tense. It may, in part, have been a way
of their maintaining in their marriage the illusion of unattainability that
seemed to have been so important to Pappy.36 And, I might add, to
Estelle.
If we misread the intentions of the fictions of love and desire that
Faulkner and Estelle created in their lives, we risk misreading the fictions of
love and desire in Faulkners art.
My book is about the family of perhaps our greatest American novelist, the first to come out of the South. The dynamics of family relations in a
Jim Crow society fractured by racism and sexism and its enduring legacy
of slavery; the problems of culturally sanctioned addiction; the place of the
artist in our culture; the difficulties of achieving a clear sense of self in such
a world are the issues on which I focus. In many ways Faulkners life is a
Type for The American Artist. Perhaps this is why the myth to which I referred earlier is so compelling. Relinquishing this one-dimensional myth,
however, and attending instead to those dimensions it obscured, changes
and enlarges our understanding of Faulkners tremendous achievement
and of the peculiar place of the artist in our culture. To clarify the signifi
cance, complexity, and richness of Faulkners originary and enduring relations with Caroline, Maud, and Estelle, and suggest their relevance to the
crucial concerns of Faulkners fiction, releases fresh perceptions of his art.

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