In Jason’s section of The Sound and the Fury it is blatantly obviously how he feels about women, both the ones in his life and in general. The beginning of his chapter, which starts with “once a bitch always a bitch, what I say,” (180) gives us the immediate sense of what Jason’s chapter will be like. We also see throughout the chapter that he is very entitled, racist, and greedy. Right from the start, we get a sense of the man that Jason has turned out to be, which is the idea that interested me the most while reading this chapter. In particular, how exactly did Jason come to be the type of man he is? What led him to act and think the way he does?
After doing just a little bit of research, I found out that Jason is one of the middle children, along with his sister Caddy. When I saw this, everything sort of just clicked for me. Caddy and Jason are the ones that, throughout the story, we and the characters of the story view as the ones that sort of act out. This completely coincides with the fact that they are both the middle children of the family; the middle children, who are often seen as the “overlooked” ones tend to be the children that act out and are more rebellious.
For instance, with Caddy, she is the child that “acted out” the most by completely disregarding her perceived reputation, both from her family and from the rest of the town. She wanted to explore her sexuality, and therefore, was the “rebellious” one of the family. As a result of her getting pregnant out of wedlock, she is kicked out of the family and becomes the sort of black sheep of the family.
With Jason, we can kind of see his “middle child” attitude come out on page 181 where he tells his mother “I never had time to go to Harvard or drink myself into the ground. I had to work.” To me, this sounds very much like a sort of petulant child that is angry at anything and everything that his siblings did or were able to do. Jason’s entitlement and greediness are also very apparent by the way he steals the money from Caddy that should be going to Quentin. To me, it seems like he feels that since he is the one that works for the family, that that money is automatically his even though he did not do a single thing to actually earn that money. Jason’s seemingly endless anger at the world, his family, and just his life in general also point towards him “acting out” because of being one of the middle children of the family. The middle child/children are often overlooked in a family and respond to that with anger or aggressiveness. With Jason, he never overcame this and brought this into his adult life, as one can see by how he treats Quentin and Dilsey in his chapter, for example on page 185 when Dilsey grabs hold of him: “Then the belt came out and I jerked loose and flung her away. She stumbled into the table.”

