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Stream of consciousness (narrative mode) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In literary criticism, stream of consciousness is a narrative mode that seeks to portray an individual's point of view by giving the written equivalent of the character's thought processes, either i...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stream_of_consciousness_(narrativ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stream_of_consciousness_(narrative_mode) |
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William Faulkner - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Stream-of-consciousness writing uses devices such as characters speaking to themselves, free association, and lists of words. William Faulkner, James Joyce, and Virginia Woolf wrote stream-of-consciousness novels.
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We think you can write just like William Faulkner! Follow this step-by-step exercise and see where your stream of consciousness takes you! ... Faulkner uses a literary technique called "stream of consciousness" to explore and expose the unspoken thoughts of his characters.
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The Stream of Consciousness; William James (1892). ... if we speak subjectively, it is the stream of consciousness that matches each of them by an inward coloring of its own. In either case the relations are numberless, and no existing language is capable of doing justice to all their shades.
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The Functioning of Sentence Structure in the Stream-of-Consciousness Technique of William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury: A Study in Linguistic Stylistics; Krakow, Poland: Biblioteka Jagiellonska, 1967.
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Faulkner in the Twenty-first Century; ... As with the earlier work, the novel focuses on a family and is told stream-of-conscious style by different narrators, but rather than an aristocratic family, the focus here is on lower-class farm laborers from southern Yoknapatawpha County, the Bundrens, whose matriarch, Addie,
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