Family meal at Faulkner Barn, with traditional comfort and unity, burns the concept of this meal, more specifically the family meal, does not destroy, and does not damage the meaning of the two soldiers. Like three short stories in Faulkner's "country", we see that the destruction of family life is often strengthened by a disruption of meals within the story. In 'Barn Grill', Abner enters the house at dusk. "You can smell of coffee from the room, they are eating the cold food left after lunch." (14) Hot meals indicate family satisfaction and unity. .
Families that continue to grow in "William Faulkner's" Barn Burning "and James Baldwin's" Sony Blues "evoke a relationship of trust and loyalty. At William Faulkner's "Barn Burning" and James Baldwin's "Sonny's Blues", the protagonists of these two stories introduce the concept of family loyalty in various ways. They continue to express the value of family loyalty, but the hero must overcome some obstacles. Finding ways to effectively communicate with your family and maintain changing identities can capture that role.
Family meal at Faulkner Barn, with traditional comfort and unity, burns the concept of this meal, more specifically the family meal, does not destroy, and does not damage the meaning of the two soldiers. Like three short stories in Faulkner's "country", we see that the destruction of family life is often strengthened by a disruption of meals within the story. In 'Barn Grill', Abner enters the house at dusk. "You can smell of coffee from the room, they are eating the cold food left after lunch." (14) Hot meals indicate family satisfaction and unity. .
Faulkner 's barn baked and turned off "Naritane burning" and "unprocessed" narrator presents a totally different storytelling approach. In "Barn Burning", Faulkner used a third party in a limited omniscised way that allowed him to enter the story of the main character Sartoris Snowpice. From this point of view, the narrator decided what the story had happened in the past and he commented: "Later, 20 years later, he also tells himself." Burning in Mississippi's virtual Yoknapatawpha County Occurred. This is a story that happened in the 1930s when there were social and economic problems during the Great Depression. "Burnburning" is a story about social inequality, especially the rich land of Spanish houses, in stark contrast to the Sartoris family farming law. Abner is the father of this family. He is indifferent to him. His family kept moving around for this reason.