A Good Man Is Hard To Find Literary Analysis

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In the short story “A Good Man is Hard to Find” written by Flannery O’Connor, we get an image of a mid-eighteenth century post war family from O’Connor’s well rounded use of literary devices. This family is taking a vacation from their home in Atlanta, Georgia to Florida, but in the midst of their callowness, find themselves not only on the road to Florida, but on their way to find themselves… at death’s front door. In “A Good Man is Hard to Find” O’Connor uses literary devices such as conflicts, imagery, simile, foreshadowing, and irony to develop her eccentric characters. Throughout “A Good Man is Hard to Find” O’Connor uses all of the previously mentioned literary devices to describe her characters in great detail. The grandmothers character …show more content…

The first occurrence of foreshadowing appears at the very beginning of the story, every member of the family is content with the decision of going to Florida for their family vacation, except the grandmother. The grandmother consistently makes statements such as “You read here what it says he did to these people. Just you read it. I wouldn’t take my children in any direction with a criminal like that a loose in it” (249) referring to the character known as the Misfit. The Misfit is a treacherous criminal who escaped from the Federal Prison and is now headed in the same direction as the family is, towards Florida. A separate occurrence of foreshadowing occurs when the attire of the grandmother is described. O’Connor describes that the grandmother is dressed in a way that “anyone seeing her dead on the highway would know at once that she was a lady” (250) which directly foreshadows how she and her family would be murdered and left on the side of the road at the end of the story. The last example of foreshadowing occurs when the family “passed by a cotton field with five or six graves fenced” (251). It is no coincidence that author O’Connor makes the number of graves the family passes the amount of “five or six”. The numbers “five or six” are equivalent to the number of family members that are inside of the car, five

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