Short Stories: A Good Man is Hard to Find, “Revelation and Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O'Conner

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Freaks and Grace

In O’Connor’s short stories she is writing from a catholic perspective, which was not very noticeable at first, but once it is realized that her stories are written with a religious undertone about grace it is hard to forget. In her short stories such as “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, “Revelation” and “Everything That Rises Must Converge” the characters are people who believe they are better than some other class and have a “holier than thou” attitude towards many, especially directed towards African-Americans who are seen as second class citizens. Because of their attitude and way of life, O’Connor gives them a chance to rethink their lives or show them grace, through an act that shocks them. O’Connor uses “freaks” to give the characters a chance at receiving grace such as the ugly girl in “Revelation”, which causes Mrs. Turpin to rethink the way she treats people she believes to below her and her judgmental ways. The “Freaks” bring about a distinct change in the way the characters view others by showing them the errors of their ways and that times have changed. This could also be considered an act of grace and a sign from God. The settings for the stories seem to be predominately take place in the south, where religion is a major influence in people’s lives during the time her stories take place. This change in their views of the world can be seen in all three of the short stories “Revelation”, “Everything That Rises Must Converge”, and “A Good Man is Hard to find”.

In the stories, the characters believe they are better than the others in one form or another, either through class or race. In “Everything that Rises Must Converge” Julian’s mother believed that she and every other white person are better than ...

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...r to make an impact, with the “ugly girl” showing Mrs. Turpin that she should be kinder in her life like the people she judges and believes she is above. The black lady with her son in “Everything that Rises Must Converge” showing Julian that he shouldn’t have been so hard on his mother for behaving the way she was raised and living the lifestyle she was used to since integration was a relatively new event in history. And in “A Good Man is Hard to Find” the grandmother is trying to get a criminal, The Misfit, to let her live calling him a “Good man” and “you’re not a bit common” though it is all in vain because The Misfit kills the grandmother without her changing and letting her live, but he did say “She would have been a good woman” (A Good Man is Hard to Find, 133). O’Connor uses these freaks as a messenger to get the characters to change and live better lives.

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