Examples Of Necrophilia In William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

Words: 1443
Pages: 6

Necrophilia is developed in correlation to having a desire to possess a non-resisting and non-rejecting partner, wanting to reunite with a romantic partner, a blunt attraction to corpses. Although seen as a taboo in many aspects, mainly for the fact of disturbing a deceased person's body, necrophilia has been recorded and witnessed in animals, including birds and lizards. The taboo activity has been recorded and has been brought to light in many different works, including William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily”. In his work, Emily can be analyzed as woman who has developed different mental illnesses including Necrophilia, after the death of her father. In Faulkner’s work, the character Emily is an isolated woman living in a tight-knit community. In regards to her rank in the town, her family, the Griersons, was once seen as having a high standard aristocrats to those in the town, but as time went by, their status soon became a thing of the past. Another factor that added to her image to others is that Emily refused to pay the taxes on the house …show more content…
The mindset that she was given by her father following up to his death eventually caused her to think disorderly in terms of having to kill Homer and it was a must in her mindset. By murdering Homer and keeping him in her bed until she also passed away, Emily was able to keep control over the situation of the rejected proposal which she deeply needed in her life to keep her in control or someone to control her life, which was lost when her father died because he was her . When her father died, she had no one to control her and she had no over-looker to watch her every move and critique her. The passing away of her father lead to her losing her sanity because of her dependency issues which were formed in the father-daughter