O 'Connor's Oppressive And Sometimes Intolerable'

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Martha Stephens, American literary critic, finds O’Connor’s work “oppressive” and “sometimes intolerable” because of O’Connor’s “stubborn refusal to seen any good, any beauty or dignity or meaning, in ordinary human life on earth” (9). The reader should not be surprised by this refusal by O’Connor because of the author’s Catholic background and fierce adherence to the doctrinal positions of her Church. The comment that she holds a “repugnant” view of life, that repulsed even some Catholics, would not have surprised O’Connor who candidly admitted that her works stirred complaints from “irate Catholics” (Fitzgerald 86). What is it about this Southern Catholic writer that triggered objections? It has been suggested that O’Connor “emphasizes …show more content…

Her writings are morality plays illustrating the truth of the Scriptural saying, “Pride leads to destruction, and arrogance to downfall” (Good News Bible, Proverbs 16:18). Hulga/Joy is proud of her intellect as Julian’s mother is proud of knowing whom she is and from whence she came. Ruby Turpin and the grandmother in “A Good Man is Hard to Find” demonstrate pride that results in contempt for others that they view as inferior to themselves. In each case, this deadly sin leads the characters to a downfall. The occasion of the downfall was generally some form of physical attack or abuse that tended to traumatize the character and shock them into a revelation. Joy/Hulga’s moment of grace come when she sees the “blue figure struggling successfully over the green speckled lake” after the Bible salesman has stolen her artificial leg (O’Connor, "Good Country People" 283). Grace enters the grandmother’s life when she is realizes that she is going to be killed by the Misfit (O’Connor, "Good Man" 151-52). The downfall caused by pride became the avenue through which grace entered the lives of these

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