William Faulkner was born in Oxford, Miss. He had【1】______ education, 【1】_

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问题     William Faulkner was born in Oxford, Miss. He had【1】______ education,   【1】______
then he joined the British Royal Air Force in Canada because he
was too short. After the war he stayed at the University of Mississippi and
began to publish poems or essays. In New Orleans, he met Sherwood Anderson,
who helped him a lot.                                                   
With the publication of Sartoris ( 1929), he found Yoknapatawpha              【2】______
【2】______ a regional myth of 200 - year - long history, which was written   【3】______
in a【3】______hut often baroque style and considered as a【4】______         【4】______
Among all novels, The Sound and the Fury ( 1929 ) , As I lay Dyig ( 1930 ) ,   
Sanctuary ( 1931 ) ,Light in August (1932) ,Absalom, Absalom (1936) ,received  
much critical【5】______.                                                     【5】______
Apart from the creation of long novels, Faulkner often used short stories
to fill【6】______ in the historical development of Yoknapatawpha             【6】______  
County. Durihg the 1930s he was off and on in Hollywood as a script writer,   
but his works for film are not accounted as being of much【7】______          【7】______
For his literary accomplishments he was【8】______ a Nobel Prize in           【8】______
1950 and he made a brief but important statement about his belief in the
Nobel【9】______ Speech:                                                      【9】______
I believe that man will not merely endure: he will【10】______..."            【10】______ [br] 【5】
William Faulkner
   William Faulkner grew up in Oxford, Miss, the great - grandson of William C. Faulkner and a member of a family like that of the sartoris clan in his novels centered on "Jefferson" in his mythical Yoknapatawpha County. After desultory education he joined tile British Royal Air Force in Canada because he was too, slight for U. S.  requirements, but World War I ended before be was commissioned or saw service beyond training, Following the war he took some courses at the University of Mississippi and published The Marble Fawn (1924), pastoral poems. Drifting to New Orleans, where he worked on a newspaper and also wrote the fiction collected in New Orleans ,Sketches (1958) ,he met Sherwood Anderson, who helped him publish Soldiers Pay is first novel, about the homecoming of a dying soldier, in the vein of the" Lost Generation."
   Following a brief stay in Europe, he issued Mosquitoes (1927), a satirical novel set in New Orleans,late the site of his minor novel Pylon (1935).
   With the publication of Sartoris ( 1929 ), he found his own themes and setting, for it is the first novel in his long, loosely constructed Yoknapatawpha saga, whose themes include the decline of the Compson, Sartoris, Benbow, and Mc- Caslin families, representatives of the Old South, and the rise of the unscrupulous Snopes family, which displaces them. The life of the region is treated from the days of Indian pos- session, through the pre - Civil War era, down - to modern times. The saga of macabre violence and antic comedy is written in a sensitive but often baroque style and depicts its region as a microcosm in which its subjects often achieve mythic proportions. Of all his novels, there are still some which have been receiving critical recognition.
   The Sound and the Fury (1929) introduces the significant but decadent Compson family in a remarkably structured ence in America that more new and important discoveries have taken place in the last ten years that in the entire previous history of science. This accelerate trend of science and technology has a large impact on the civilization. story. As I lay Dying(1930) reveals the psychological relationships of a subnormal poor - white family on a pilgrimage to bury their mother. Sanctuary(1931) is a sadistic horror story, ostensibly written to make money but carefully re- worked before publication as a serious novel. Light in August (1932) is a more balanced contrast of positive and negative tones of life in it presentation of violent adventure involved in the relations between men and women, black and white.
   Absalom, Absalom! ( 1936), set in early 19th -century ,Jefferson shows the tragic downfall of the dynastic desires of the planter Colonel Sutpen. The Hamlet(1940) ,along with two later novels, The Town  (1957)  and  The Mansion (1960) , is collectively known as the "Snopes Trilogy."
   A Fable(1954) wins Pulitzer Prize, and it is a lengthy parable of the Passion of Christ set in a framework of false armistice and actual mutiny in World War  I. The Reivers ( 1962 ), published just before the authors death, is an amusing fictive a "reminiscence" of a boy’s various misadventures in 1905 ,and it also wins Pulitzer Prize.
   Apart from the creation of long morels, Faulkner often used short stories to fill gaps in the historical development of Yoknapatawpha County. These 13 ( 1931 ), five volumes of short stories, includes many of his famous short story collections read widely even today. Go Down, Moses(1942) is an- other short story collection that can also be considered as a novel, with a thematic unity binding the separate sections of the work.
   During the 1930s he was off and on in Hollywood as a script writer, but his works for film are not accounted as being of much consequence Critical news stated while leaching in Japan, at the university of Virginia, and at West Point appear in Faulkner at Nagano(1956 ). Faulkner in the university(1959) ,and Faulkner at West Point(1964). For his literary accomplishments Faulkner was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1950 and in acceptance made a brief but important statement about his belief "that man will not merely endure: he
will prevail.., because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance and "the writer’s duty is to write about these things ... to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor said hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of... ’
   On the whole, the vast body of work created by William Faulkner is distinctly American, yet reflects, on a grander scale, the universal values of human life. And that Faulkner attemptes such large human themes with so much literary imagination and craft in a historical period of skepticism and dimution may explain in large measure why the general public can recognize his fiction for such a long time and even forever.

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答案 recognition

解析 “critical recognition”为“critical notice or attention.”批评的:“critical”为“of or relating to critics or criticism”;“recognition”为“attention or favorable notice”知名。
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