Integrity is the most valuable and respected quality of leadership. Always keep your word. “Brian Tracy”. Flannery O’ Connor story presents us with a strange morality one where hypocrisy and integrity; also, religion has to do with the story. We can relate this story into today’s society because, sometimes people just thing for themselves and what they want. Just as the grandma just thought for her selves on going to Tennessee instead to Florida like the rest of the family. The message of “A Good Man is Hard to Find” is that the decisions and actions that the grandmother and Misfit take will affect them in future. I believe this passage is also a great representation about what type of people are in this world, there are bad people who persist in believing that they are “good” like the grandmother or the kindness people. In “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, O’ Connor portraits a selfish, sell-centered grandmother to show the idea that conviction and sincere moral character is a myth.
From the background research, it is mention that O’ Connor tries to convince the Misfit to start praying and become religious in order to solve his problems. However, the Misfit uses his “reasons” on why he does not need to pray and he kill the grandmother (O’Connor pg. 11). It shows that most people today in society don’t need to look at religion to help them through their lives. O’ Connor talent was unnoticed when she published (Wise Blood in 1952). While her novel was published, she was criticized for being an affront to Christianity. However, O’Connor published her first collection of short stories and one of them was “A Good Man is Hard to Find” she wrote it in 1955, and she continued with the second novel. O’Connor was an American novelist she had a relationship between the individual and God, she grew up in prominent Roman Catholic family in Georgia where she was born.
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The article “A Good Man is Hard to Find” state about how readers believed that the grandmother was evil even a witch. However, O’Connor speaks of her Catholicism and its expression in her fiction. Do to the grandmother’s decisions she affected the family on the field trip because of her actions. As a result, the grandmother was selfish and she just look on herself, she was very religious she thought that by telling Misfit to pray he would not kill her, the grandmother tells Misfit “Why you’re one of my babies. You’re one of my own children!” (O’Connor pg. 13). This is a demonstration of what type of people are in this world, for example, there is people that they do not need to pray to be closer to Jesus, and there is people that like to pray so they can build their relationship with Jesus (O’Connor pg. 2). My articles do connect with “A Good Man is Hard to Find” because they talk about how we need to learn not to be selfish, and have that integrity with your family. Also, how our decisions can cause a conflict like the grandmother. There’s those kinds of people that do have the need to pray like the grandmother and there’s people that thing that they don’t need to pray like Misfit. In the second article says that Flannery O’Connor “addresses the subject of eternal salvation. Influenced by her own strong Roman Catholic beliefs, she believes man will only… ” (O’Cononr pg. 3). As well in the article seven, Flanner O’Connor says, “When the grandmother grasps that her strategy is not working because he lets her know that” “Nome, I ain’t a good man, she implores him to pray” (O’Connor 128).
Flannery O’Connor use of simile when the family got into the accident and they meet Misfit, “Behind them the line woods gaped like a dark open mouth” (O’ Connor pg.9). Then O’Connor describes the children’s mother, “...Whose face was as broad and innocent as a cabbage and was tried around with a green head” (O’ Connor pg. 2). O’ Connor also uses simile on “his hip bones and his stomach hung over them like sack” (O’Connor pg. 5). It also shows that “A Good Man is Hard to Find” use of irony when “The next morning the grandmother was the first one in the car...” (O’Connor pg. 2). In addition, syntax is used in the passage “Afraid she’d miss something. She has to go everywhere we go” (O’Connor pg. 2). The grandmother would not stay home for million dollars she goes where the family goes. Then Red Sammy tells the grandmother about “Two fellers come in here last week” and he said, “They worked at the mill and you know I let them fellers charge the gas they bought?” (O’Connor pg. 5).
Bibliography:
- Ochshorn, Kathleen G. 'A Cloak of Grace: Contradictions in' A Good Man is Hard to Find'.' Studies in American Fiction 18.1 (1990): 113-117.
- McCullough, R. Scott. 'Flannery O'Connor As Neighborhood Missionary: The Roman Catholic Didacticism of' A Good Man in Hard To Find' in the Heart of the Bible Belt.' (1992).
- Chestnut, Allison Carol. 'A Reading of' A Good Man Is Hard to Find' and' A Curtain of Green': The Influence of Parable on Flannery O'Connor and Eudora Welty.' (1991).
- Harris, Abbie C. 'Jesus Thrown Everything Off Balance': Grace and Redemption in Flannery O'Connor's' A Good Man is Hard to Find.' Papers & Publications: Interdisciplinary Journal of Undergraduate Research 3.1 (2014): 5.
- Jing, Li. 'Flannery O'Connor's Gothic art/Art gothique de Flannery O'Connor.' Canadian Social Science 2.4 (2006): 53.
- Stolarek, Joanna. 'Hellish Bedlam and Search for Christian Values in Flannery O’Connor’s and Flan O’Brien’s Works.'
- Tomasi, Rose M. Flannery O'Connor: Revelations of the Displaced Soul. Diss. The Graduate School, Stony Brook University: Stony Brook, NY., 2011.
- Nasution, Al–Yuni Fazriani. 'Racial Discrimination Portrayed in Flannery O’connor’s Short Stories: a Good Man is Hard To Find and Everything That Rises Must Converge.' (2017).