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“A Good Man is Hard to Find” Flannery O’Connor

“A Good Man is Hard to Find”

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“A Good Man is Hard to Find”. Flannery O’Connor. Flannery O’Connor 1925-1964. Characteristics of O’Connor’s Work. Southern Lens Local Color Catholic Perspective Humorous Strong Characterization Comic/Tragic Vision Shocking Plots (Gothic/Grotesque). The Gothic in Literature. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

“A Good Man is Hard to Find”

Flannery O’Connor

Page 2: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

Flannery O’Connor 1925-1964

Page 3: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

Characteristics of O’Connor’s Work

Southern Lens Local Color Catholic Perspective Humorous Strong

Characterization Comic/Tragic Vision Shocking Plots

(Gothic/Grotesque)

Page 4: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

The Gothic in Literature 18th century Particularly American Horror, violence,

supernatural Gothic architecture Purpose to build

suspense Supernatural, ironic,

unusual events guide the plot

Poe’s “Tell-Tale Heart”

Page 5: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

Southern Gothic

“A lurid or macabre writing style native to the American South. Since the middle of the 20th century, Southern writers have interpreted and illuminated the history and culture of the region through the conventions of the Gothic narrative (or Gothic novel), which at its best provides insight into the horrors institutionalized in societies and social conventions. Foremost among these authors are William Faulkner, Flannery O’Connor, Tennessee Williams, and Carson McCullers.”

www.notesinthemargin.org/glossary_of_literary_terms/southern_gothic.html.

Page 6: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

The Grotesque

A feature of the Southern Gothic

Situations, places or stock characters that possess disturbing features

Racial bigotry O’Connor’s

unexpected action Southern Gothic, 2005

Page 7: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

Flannery O’Connor on The Grotesque

In each story, “an action that is totally unexpected, yet totally believable” (118), often an act of violence, “violence being the situation that best reveals what we are essentially” (113).

--O’Connor, Mystery and Manners

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“Revelation” “Mrs. Turpin occupied herself at

night naming the classes of people. On the bottom of the heap were most colored people, not the kind she would have been if she had been one, but most of them; then next to them—not above, just away from were the white …Usually by the time she had fallen asleep all the classes of people were moiling and roiling around in her head, and she would dream they were all crammed together in a boxcar being ridden off to be put in a gas oven.”

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“Parker’s Back”

O’Connor’s stories raise “the voices of displaced persons offering the Grace of God in the grotesqueness of the world.”

Georgia Women of Achievement

Page 10: “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

“A Good Man is Hard to Find” (1953)

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Themes in “A Good Man”

Good vs. Evil Faith vs. Doubt Old vs. New Ways

as seen in the Family

Old vs. New South Is there such a

thing as a good man?

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A Close Reading

Local Color

Strong Characterization

Humor

Catholic Perspective

Southern Gothic/Grotesque

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The Characters

Grandmother Mother Bailey John Wesley June Star Red Sammy The Misfit How is each character

awful in his own way? Who is the real misfit? www.spazmanda.com

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The Journey—1950’s

Evolving transportation system

The “family car” Atlanta to Florida What is the

journey?

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The Journey?

Family breakdown?

From the Old South to the New South?

Search for Christ? Misfit’s failed

journey to redemption?

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The Misfit: The Freak in All of Us

"It is only in these centuries when we are afflicted with the doctrine of the perfectibility of human nature by its own efforts that the vision of the freak in fiction is so disturbing. The freak in modern fiction is usually disturbing to us because he keeps us from forgetting that we share in his state" (Mystery and Manners, 113).

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Flannery O’Connor’s God

“While the South is not Christ-centered, it is certainly Christ- haunted” (www.georgetown.edu.faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/o’connor.html).

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Southern Road Signs, circa 1940

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O’Connor’s Christian Mystery “the action of grace in

territory largely held by the devil” (Mystery and Manners, 118).

“We go by the side of the road, watching those who pass. Beware lest he devour you. We go to the Father of Souls, but it is necessary to pass by the dragon.—St. Cyril of Jerusalem” (“A Good Man” 357).

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O’Connor’s Redemption

“for me the meaning of our life is centered in our Redemption by Christ and what I see in the world I see in its relation to that” (The Fiction Writer and His Country)

The Adoration of the Name of Jesus, El Greco, 1578-80

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The Grotesque in “A Good Man”(In The Enigma of William Tell, 1933, Salvador Dali)

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O’Connor’s Moment of the Grotesque

"I suppose the reasons for the use of so much violence in modern fiction will differ with each writer who uses it, but in my own stories I have found that violence is strangely capable of returning my characters to reality and preparing them to accept their moment of grace."

"In my stories a reader will find that the devil accomplishes a good deal of groundwork that seems to be necessary before grace is effective."

"the devil [is] the unwilling instrument of grace" and that her "subject in fiction is the action of grace in territory held largely by the devil."

(Mystery and Manners, 18)

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Passing By the Dragon

“Why you’re one of my babies. You’re one of my own children.”

“She would have been a good woman,” the Misfit said, “if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.”

(“A Good Man,” 367).