![]() ![]() It is most prominent in those set in Yoknapatawpha County, an imaginary Mississippi landscape filled with battlefields and graveyards, veterans and widows, slaves and former slaves, draft dodgers and ghosts. ![]() ![]() ![]() The Civil War features in some dozen of Faulkner’s novels. In contrast with those delusions, Faulkner’s fiction revealed the truth: the Confederacy was both a military and a moral failure. This Lost Cause revisionism appeared everywhere, from the textbooks that Faulkner was assigned growing up to editorials in local newspapers, praising the paternalism and the prosperity of the slavery economy, jury-rigging an alternative justification for secession, canonizing as saints and martyrs those who fought for the C.S.A., and proclaiming the virtues of antebellum society. The Mississippi novelist was born thirty-two years after Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox, but he came of age believing in the superiority of the Confederacy: the South might have lost, but the North did not deserve to win. What if the North had won the Civil War? That technically factual counterfactual animated almost all of William Faulkner’s writing. ![]()
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