Frailty of the Human Psyche Explored by Flannery O'Connor
Flannery O'Connor's stories remain popular because she creates colorful characters that help her drive her points home. In many ways, O'Connor delivers readers a different reality, which allows them to look upon characters in a different way, thus forcing them to look at humanity in a different way as well. In "A Good Man is Hard to Find" and "Everything that Rises Must Converge," O'Connor presents extreme realities with extraordinary characters. Grandma, The Misfit, Julian and his mother appear to be one kind of person but in truth, they are different from these facades. They believe they are one way but readers see them as something else. The reader in these cases is the silent observer and O'Connor uses this situation well because this is how we are in many situations in everyday life. We simply watch others as they interact and this provides a clear picture of what is going on. Because of the utter blindness to self and unsightly behavior, "Everything that Rises Must Converge" emerges as superior.
People are blind to many things but nothing beats how people can lie to themselves about how they actually are. In "A Good Man is Hard to Find," O'Connor demonstrates with Grandma and The Misfit how people are not what they seem to be. O'Connor contrasts overbearing Grandma and The Misfit to show how these two outwardly different people are alike. Grandma is not intrinsically evil but she is controlling and pompous. While she comes amazingly close to figuring out what is wrong with what her personal beliefs, she does not quite get there and this makes her incredulous. She proclaims that she would never take her children in any direction...
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