“The Audiophonic Form of As I Lay Dying,” in Fifty Years After Faulkner, edited by Jay Watson and Ann J. Abadie (University of Mississippi Press, 2016). To the download the chapter click here. The full book also available here. This essay was originally presented at the 2012 annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference.
Julie Beth Napolin studies the history and theory of sound and its intersections with the novel, film, art, performance, psychoanalysis, gender, and race, asking what practices of listening can tell us about the politics of memory and form. She is the co-Editor of the William Faulkner Journal, a member of the editorial board of Sound Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, and the former President of the New School chapter of the American Association of University Professors. She received her PhD in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley.