![]() However, what is more interesting is the juxtaposition between Peabody's and Darl's display of Anse's speech. ![]() I promised her I'd keep the team here and ready, and she's counting on it." The Phonetic spelling of "Hit jest ere corn me keer" shows an awareness of writers trying to imitate the sound of dialogue in reality. Peabody's recording of Anse's speech as "Hit was jest one thing and then another that ere corn me and the boys was aimin to git up with good keer of her, and folks comin a-offerin to help and isch, till a jest thought" juxtaposes Darl's recording of Anse's speech as "she'll want to start right away. Necessarily, therefore, even if the characters of Jewel and Pa were not fictional, it goes through a sense of fabrication: it is affected by 'material embodiment.' Faulkner displays this idea, arguably suggesting that the reader cannot count any of the narratives as objective truths: but all have been altered in its conversion to language in light of that specific narrator's consciousness. This idea addresses the clear distinction between reality and literature, in that in literature, speech can only be expressed through a different medium: language. ![]() ![]() Stephen M Ross highlights that people should recognise that recorded dialogue (for example "where's Jewel" Pa Says) is equally unreliable as regular narration of an event. This unreliability is first shown through contrast in dialogue. ![]()
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