![]() The way Faulkner illustrates the black characters is derogatory and the black dialect he uses is an exaggerated form, making them seem ignorant. Faulkner gives the fourth section to Dilsey in an attempt to make an argument for racial equality and in doing so, for the first time, allows the other characters fail to recognize. ![]() ![]() While this is a major milestone in modern literature, Faulkner refuses to allow Dilsey to voice her own thoughts and beliefs. The final section of the novel is the first time Faulkner utilizes a black character as the main focus. ![]() Her role is to oversee their family and be the ultimately be the caretaker of the Compson children. In William Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury”, the first three sections on the novel focus on three different days, while the fourth section focuses on Dilsey, the Compson family’s black servant. ![]()
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