Someone once said that a man’s problems almost always fall under two categories: finance and romance. With Jason’s chapter we shift towards a money-focused perspective and one that is refreshingly objective, albeit cold and detached. However, we soon realize that, for him, finance and romance are psychologically intertwined.
My experience of reading this novel was like being immersed in a dense fog that slowly began to dissolve as I kept reading. From a narration point of view, it was like being thrown behind a camera that was zoomed in all the way, and then gradually zoomed outward until I could see all of the details, the characters, and the action in focus from a kind of aerial view. Benjy’s narration is so internalized that his world is our world. By the time we get to Dilsey, we are hovering above the family, its dark past, its current struggles and its murky future from a more objective and clearer place. So it is with time: the present is all we know; we are in it and there is no escape. But as we move forward through time and look back, the past begins to clarify, based on what we know now. As the old saying goes, “Hindsight is 20-20.” Faulkner’s novel moves in many directions but steadily takes us from the past to the present and into the future.
It is with Jason’s character that we make this all-important shift in perspective. The novel begins to take on a traditional linear, action-based, plot-driven quality that we are used to (and, by now, yearning for). Jason is unique in his ability to take action. None of the other characters act decisively, except perhaps for Dilsey, who is more of a spiritual mother of the house. What is interesting to note is that both Jason’s sexuality and masculinity are connected to money. He has commodified these primal elements of himself, in an attempt to exchange and control their nature. An obvious example of this is his interactions with women, which are limited to prostitutes. Jason is bitter with the men around him, a tough exterior put on to hide the insecure and impotent interior.
All of the men in this novel are castrated, either literally (in Benjy’s case) or metaphorically. Jason has built so much of his self-value on the money he has stashed away, that when Miss Quentin robs him it is felt to same degree as an actual castration. However there is more than Jason’s self-value in this money, for we learn that it is money sent by Caddy for Miss Quentin. Therefore the money Jason is stealing represents the only way Caddy has of acting as a mother to her daughter. Jason’s role, then, becomes one of blocking the maternal forces that feebly try to manifest themselves, the irony being that he is his mother’s favorite child. He goes into a blind rage when he discovers that he has been robbed, and the action intensifies when he sets out to hunt down Miss Quentin with a manic quality reminiscent of Dmitri Karamazov trailing Grushenka in Dostoevsky’s novel. But Jason’s underlying infatuation with Miss Quentin precedes this robbery. He stalks her the way an ex-boyfriend might, and his detective work is rewarded when he spots her with the man with the red tie. The tie itself becomes a kind of symbol for Miss Quentin’s budding sexuality, a menstrual streak worn proudly by the man on his shirt.
But despite all this, Jason is as impotent as Benjy. We see this when he threateningly tries to provoke the sheriff into helping him find Miss Quentin: Jason told him, his sense of injury and impotence feeding upon its own sound, so that after a time he forgot his haste in the violent cumulation of his self justification and his outrage. And again: He repeated his story, harshly recapitulant, seeming to get an actual pleasure out of his outrage and impotence. (303) Faulkner underlines the masochistic element of Jason’s character, while at the same time exposing its hollowness. A question for the class: why does Jason get an “actual pleasure” from his own impotence, once he’s lost his money, especially considering how domineering and power-hungry he is?

