Theoretical Explorations

Resisting Normativity in Subjection:An Analysis of Lena Grove’s Vagrancy in Light in August

Yuan Tian (Corresponding Author)
ROR School of Foreign Studies, Minzu University of China
Global Review of Humanities, Arts, and Society
Published:2025-07-29

Abstract

of Light in August. However, the specific narrative strategies Faulkner employs to construct this luminous image need further critical examination. This study utilizes Judith Butler’s notion of normativity and subjection to elucidate Lena’s vagrancy, positioning it in relation to the novel’s titular “light”, the problems of the American South, and the broader condition of modernity: In her vagrancy, Lena not only adopts a resisting standpoint to the traditional identity of the Southern lady and the interpellation of Southern normativity, but also demonstrates a capacity to seek the mainstream’s recognition with an appropriate strategy of subjection, through which a desirable modification of the rigid Southern ideologies is made possible. Therefore, Lena’s vagrancy is a symbol of the freedom of spirit, a possibility to modify Southern ideologies, and an inherent impulse to progress; Lena also functions as the light and a savior of the Southern town in Light in August. Through creating Lena, Faulkner offers a cure to the Southern disease of stagnation, racism and puritanism, and transcends the literary images of ineffectual, impotent modern men characteristic of the early twentieth century.

Keywords:

Lena Grove; Light in August; William Faulkner; vagrancy; normativity
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Journal Info

ISSN3052-539X
PublisherPanorama Scholarly Group

How to Cite

Tian, Y. (2025). Resisting Normativity in Subjection:An Analysis of Lena Grove’s Vagrancy in Light in August. Global Review of Humanities, Arts, and Society, 1(3), 103-112. https://doi.org/10.63802/grhas.v1.i3.65

References

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Butler, Judith. (1999). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York and London: Routledge.

Bleikasten, Andre. (1990). The Ink of Melancholy: Faulkner’s Novels from The Sound and the Fury to Light in August. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Visser, Irene. (2004). Faulkner’s Mendicant Madonna: the Light of Light in August. Literature & Theology, 18(1), 38-48. https://doi.org/10.1093/litthe/18.1.38

Zhao, Na. (2017). Revisiting Judith Butler’s Theory of Gender Performativity at the Turn of Postmodern Theory of Subject. Journal of Anhui Normal University (Hum.&Soc.Sci.), 45(4),522-528.DOI:10.14182/j.cnkij..anu.2017.04.017

Grmusa, Lovorka Gruic, & Oklopcic, Biljana. (2022). Memory and Identity in Modern and Postmodern American Literature. Singapore: Springer.

Butler, Judith, & Worms, Frédéric. (2023). The Livable and the Unlivable: a Conversation Initiated by Arto Charpentier and Laure Barillas. New York: Fordham University Press.

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