"A Good Man Is Hard To Find:" Religious Negligence

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“’She would of been a good women, ‘The Misfit said, ‘if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life’”(6). Flannery O’Connor grew up in southern Georgia where she was raised in a prominent Roman Catholic family. O’Connor endured hard times in life when her father died of lupus erythematous, which she was diagnosed with later in life. These life events influence her writing greatly. She uses her religion and gothic horror in her writings to relay a message to people that may be on the wrong path, in an attempt to change it. The author wrote during the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. Flannery O’Connor wrote “Everything That Rises Must Converge” and “A Good Man Is Hard To Find”.
“A Good Man Is Hard To Find” was written in 1953. The story demonstrates a broken family who can barely tolerate each other, going on a trip to Florida. Coincidentally, The Misfit has escaped from prison and is headed in the same direction as them. The grandmother continually attempts to persuade Bailey, her son, to go to destination that is not on their agenda. The only exception to their deviation of their route leads to The Misfit, who is a symbol of the grandmother’s salvation and the reality of everyone’s death. An individual’s misconstrued truth about their identity can falsify and taint their religion, therefore, leading them to beg for salvation. For example, in “A Good Man Is Hard To Find”, the grandmother manipulates everyone, compares the past to the present, and believes so passionately in her “lady hood” that it becomes her religion.
The grandmother has a crafty mind when it comes to getting her way. She manipulates everyone, mainly her family to get what she wants. She does this because in her time period it is what was req...

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...appearance and attitude symbolize who she whole-heartedly believes she is, a lady.
Mixing religion and identity will take truth away from one’s religion, therefore, leading them to beg for salvation. For example, the grandmother manipulates everyone, compares the past to the present, and believes so hard in her lady hood that it becomes her religion. Flannery O’Connor used gothic horror and Catholicism to make the readers question themselves, Are they living a false life based on personal “quota” or by God’s teachings? After the grandmother realizes her faults she allows the hat to fall to the ground, symbolizing her final truth of her identity. It is now up to her to beg for salvation. Only by the grace of God does someone receive salvation and enter the holy gaits above. The decision is based on their life’s journey. Do you deserve salvation and everlasting life?

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