Argument: Olga Kuminova, in her article "Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury as a Struggle for Ideal Communication" argues that the incommunicable nature of the characters in the novel marks the distinguishing tone that William Faulkner uses to "lend the novel full and appreciative attention". Claim: Benjy relates every single experience by sound or glimpse, thus maintaining the incommunicable nature of the plot. Evidence: Frank Swinnerton, review, Evening News 15 May 1931, 8, in Bassett 92
Argument: Olga Kuminova, in her article "Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury as a Struggle for Ideal Communication" argues that the incommunicable nature of the characters in the novel marks the distinguishing tone that William Faulkner uses to "lend the novel full and appreciative attention".
Claim: Benjy relates every single experience by sound or glimpse, thus maintaining the incommunicable nature of the plot.
Evidence: Frank Swinnerton, review, Evening News 15 May 1931, 8, in Bassett 92