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    father’s innocence? Or will he tell the truth, thereby forever jeopardizing the relationship he has with his father, but potentially ending the fugitive lifestyle that he has grown all too accustomed to? This describes more than the opening scene of “Barn Burning” by William Faulkner, it can be used to describe a more meaningful conflict, the conflict between doing the right thing and maintaining loyalty to one’s family. This short story illustrates that concept as it is being tested…

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    brilliant novels and short stories throughout the 1930’s that highlighted his career. In 1939 Faulkner wrote the short story Barn Burning, which was about a father’s power and his son’s loyalty. Abner, the father and head of the family, likes to have control of every situation, but despises those who has power and control over him, so he takes the action of burning down the barns to those who have higher authority than him. His son Sarty is expected to stay loyal to his father and their family…

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    The story of Barn Burning by William Faulkner had many themes, but loyalty and morals are the greatest challenges for a young boy who is torn between loyalty to his family and the morality of doing the right thing even if it meant going against his own father. As the story progresses you notice the changes in the boy’s rational thinking. He transitions from a boy scared into being loyal to his father to a morally correct being, later in the story. Loyalty is something that was beaten into…

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    The short stories, “Barn Burning” by William Faulkner, “An Ounce of Cure” by Alice Munro, and “Carnal Knowledge” by T. C. Boyle are all similar in the way that the protagonists in each story are stubborn. They do not see that the choices they make negatively impact them and those around them. In the story “Barn Burning” by William Faulkner, the protagonist, Colonel Sartoris Snopes, Sarty for short, is caught between a character vs. character conflict between him and his father, Abner Snopes.…

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    from the director’s point of view which usually leaves the audience unsatisfied. A book gives meticulous details about the story’s setting, tone, mood, and conflict while the film goes over the main scenes with indistinct detail. William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning” does just that; the book gives vivid detail about every aspect in the book while…

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    William Faulkner’s ‘Barn Burning’ is the tale of a ten-year old boy by the name of Colonel “Sarty” Sartoris Snopes, his father, Abner “Ab” Snopes, and the difference between right and wrong. Sarty is in the courtroom along with his father, Abner Sartoris, who is on trial for arson. Sarty is contemplating the possibility of him having to testify in court for his father setting a barn on fire. He is afraid because he is unsure of what he would do; unfortunately, young Sarty doesn't know if he…

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    “Barn Burning” by William Faulkner is a short story about how Colonel Sartoris Snopes, often referred to in the story as Sarty, struggles with morality and his family bonds as his father, Abner Snopes, commits acts of arson with a cold, calculated demeanor. The story starts with a court hearing about one such incident, a barn burning, where the Snopes end up banished from that county. After arriving at a new place, Abner takes Sarty to see their landlords for a reason not mentioned. The…

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    In the short story Barn burning by William Faulkner, it is about a family where Abner Snopes the father of Sartoris appears to be an arrogant and destructive person. Due to his jealousy he burns Mr. Harris’s barn where he doesn’t have any proof to put forth against Snopes. The judge warns Snopes to leave the county for his good where he agrees to do so. The family moves to a new home where Snopes along with Sartoris meets Major De Spain, the owner on whose land the family will work. Snopes…

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    Abner in, William Faulkner's “Barn Burning,” represents resilience, and power. When Abner is first introduced, he is accused for the burning of Mr. Harris’s barn. Mr. Harris explains the numerous amount of times he’s offered to help Abner fix his pen, but Abner refuses to take any orders not fabricated by his own mind. In an effort to solve the problem, the court asks his son Sarty to testify. With Abner's silent power over him, Sarty is forced to see everyone who is an enemy of Abner, as an…

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    hopeless life, and some fail to do so. Sometimes escaping their old live can be a dramatic change.. They could lose the comfort of their home, their families, and more. This dramatic change can happen to those who are not prepared to endure it. In "Barn Burning" by William Faulkner, the story revolves around Colonel Sartoris Snopes, a boy of ten years old, who despises his current life. After his dad burned down a farm, they moved to another area, in which he believed their lives could return to…

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