Abstract The paper discusses the development of Bailey in Flannery O'Connor's short story, "A GoodMan Is Hard to Find." The paper analyzes the character of Bailey as an apathetic man who cannot prevent the massacre of his family.
From the Paper "In "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" Flannery O'Connor introduces a number of characters among whom an elderly grandmother and an escaped convict known as the Misfit are generally predominate. While these two characters occupy center stage in much of the narrative and dialogue, other characters such as the grandmother's son Bailey are also vital actors inthe drama that unfolds and culminates with a mass murder."
Tags: Flannery O'Connor, A GoodMan Is Hard to Find, character development
Abstract This paper an analysis of Flannery O Connor's short story "A GoodMan is Hard to Find". The analysis focuses on the author's apparent belief that acts of violence are often more necessary than religious beliefs or faiths in order to demonstrate the "truth" about human nature.
From the Paper "The characters in Flannery O'Connor's A Good Man is Hard to Find are hard, that is they are hard headed. The Grandmother's insistence that her family take a detour to view a historic house results in the murder .."
Abstract This paper evaluates the title of Flannery O'Connor's book, "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" from the perspective of the grandmother character in the book. More specifically, the paper analyzes the title from the grandmother's perspective of a goodman and the individual's ability to findgoodness from within the soul. As an example of this perspective, the paper points out that the grandmother continuously discusses the concept of a 'goodman' as she views main in relation to society. When conversing with the mechanic, Red, the grandmother contends that he was taken advantage of by others because he was naturally good, and therefore, a "goodman". The paper explains that this conversation suggests that a goodman is one that treats others kindly and that attempts to do his utmost in order to be honorable within the social order.
Abstract This paper discusses the antagonist in Flannery O'Connor's short story, "A GoodMan is Hard to Find". The paper analyzes his struggles with finding meaning in life. His existential probing is not reflected in any of the other characters in the story. Because of his genuine existential queries and the emotional numbness that he has cultivated throughout his life, O'Connor manages to portray a deadly psychopath in a sympathetic light.
From the Paper ""I call myself The Misfit," he said, "because I can't make what all I done wrong fit all I gone through in punishment," (O'Connor 131). The antagonist in Flannery O'Connor's short story "A Good Man is Hard to Find" struggles with finding meaning in life. His existential probing is not reflected in any of the other characters in the story. Because of his genuine existential queries and the emotional numbness that he has cultivated throughout his life, O'Connor manages to portray a deadly psychopath in a sympathetic light. The reader is encouraged to relate more to the killer than to the tale's protagonist: the nameless Grandmother who is demanding, talkative, and stubborn. Her family is portrayed in a similarly ambiguous and unsympathetic light: Bailey continuously laments their "predicament" without truly standing up to the Misfit and his gang. The little girl June Star pipes up at annoying moments and even demonstrates morbidity, as when she exclaims after the accident, "But nobody's killed." The narrator notes that June Star said those words "with disappointment." The only "good man" in the story might be the ancillary character Red Sam, who utters the phrase that titles the story. Through "A Good Man is Hard to Find," Flannery O'Connor presents a twisted, distorted, and morally ambiguous view of life, seen primarily through the eyes of a murderer."
Abstract This paper explains that Grandmother in Flannery O'Connor's short story, "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" seems like the typical harmless mother/ mother-in-law/grandmother who believes she is always right and everybody else is wrong, no matter what the issue is. The author points out that O' Connor displays the image that the grandmother considers herself to be "godlike" or "above all" but she is the complete opposite. The paper states that the grandmother is very self-centered and vain and only cares about herself and the way people perceive her. The author concludes that, finally, the grandmother goes through an epiphany at the end of the story when she realizes she cannot talk her way out of the predicament in which she finds herself.
From the Paper "The grandmother is also very self-centered and vain. She only cares about herself and the way people perceive her. For instance for the car ride, everyone wore comfortable casual clothes while the grandmother dressed in her Sunday best; that consisted of a navy blue dress with her collars trimmed in white lace and a huge hat filled with violets topped off with a pair of white cotton gloves. In case of an accident, she wanted to make sure that she would be quickly identified as a lady if was sprawled out on the highway."
Tags: selfishness, southern, epiphany, manipulative, christian
Abstract This paper discusses how in Flannery O'Connor's story "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" the reader finds themselves bombarded by a colloquial mannerism as portrayed by the grandmother figure in the story. In particular, the paper delves into the grandmother's perception and reaction the events around her and her personal view of certain situations. An analysis of the plot is dissected as well as the impetus for specific characters in the story.
From the Paper "The colloquial use of such words as pickininny, rigger and the reference to country riggers not having pants on in the country all point to a social commentary on racism. The item that is extremely alarming in this symbolism is the calm reaction the rest of the family has to grandmother's comments. The reference to plantations and Gone with the Wind are all symbols in the story to allow the reader to traverse past the family on vacation and to take a cerebral road trip to the past, the aggressions of the country during the war and the common day sentiment on slaves as McPherson (1965) writes, "Freedom has been your legacy from birth; by some of us it has been achieved. We know what oppression is..." (McPherson The Negro's civil War 15). Thus, the grandmother does not know in the story yet, what oppression is so then she most assuredly does not know what freedom is."
Abstract This paper is a critical analysis of "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" by Flannery O?Connor. The author examines the characters and their experiences and the theme of change.
From the Paper "In Flannery O?Connor's stories the main character, often through some contact with violence, goes through a transformation. Some of these changes occur when the character is confronted by the fact that the world in which they live and their position in it are not as they perceive. In "Everything That Rise Must Converge" this realization shatters the main characters mind. However, in "A Good Man is Hard to Find" the main character, the grandmother, changes from a self-centered, hypocrite into a person who things of others and is aware of her responsibility. O?connor uses an encounter with a criminal called Misfit to change her main character."
Abstract The author reviews Flannery O?Connor's short story ?A GoodMan is Hard to Find?. She states that O"Connor's writing reflects her Southern and Catholic traditions. Although she cannot be read as part of the feminist literary tradition, O"Connor is important to contemporary American fiction.
From the Paper "The words of the grandmother might seem sentimental, were she not speaking to a man who is a homicidal killer, about to blow her away to ?kingdom come.? "A Good Man is Hard to Find" depicts a rather repulsive young family, including June Star who "wouldn"t live in a broken-down place? for a "million bucks" and the rather irritating grandmother. (7) But because the grandmother is able to see some brief snatch of humanity in the "Misfit" who eventually kills her, O?Connor bestows her with a kind of grace in terms of the narrative's judgment."
Abstract The author reviews Flannery O?Connor's short story ?A GoodMan is Hard to Find?. She states that O"Connor's writing reflects her southern and Catholic traditions. Although she cannot be read as part of the feminist literary tradition, O"Connor is important to contemporary American fiction.
From the Paper "The words of the grandmother might seem sentimental, were she not speaking to a man who is a homicidal killer, about to blow her away to ?kingdom come.? "A Good Man is Hard to Find" depicts a rather repulsive young family, including June Star who "wouldn"t live in a broken-down place? for a "million bucks" and the rather irritating grandmother. (7) But because the grandmother is able to see some brief snatch of humanity in the "Misfit" who eventually kills her, O?Connor bestows her with a kind of grace in terms of the narrative's judgment."
Abstract The author states that O'Connor's "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" is a poignant story of the cold-blooded murder of a Georgian family. The paper outlines the plot segments: Family dynamic, comedy of travel and tragedy. The author discusses the writing technique of the O'Connor's story as a competition between "Situational Irony" and "Tragic Irony".
From the Paper "Flannery O?Connor's "A Good Man is Hard to Find" is a poignant story of the cold-blooded murder of a family of a Georgian man Bailey, his wife, a new born baby, and two children: John-Wesley and June Star; and, Bailey's mother. The killers are: a possible serial killer known as the Misfit, and two accomplices, Bobby Lee and Hiram?all three escaped convicts. What deepens the poignancy is that as each member of the family is shot, the others are aware of the tragedy slowly befalling them."
Abstract This paper analyzes the central character with reference to main themes of the short story, "A GoodMan is Hard To Find" by Flannery O?Connor. The paper discusses the grandmother, who occupies the most important place in the story along with the misfit. The paper describes her as quite a manipulative woman whose real character surfaces when she is closest to death.
From the Paper ""A good man is hard to find" is not exactly the kind of story that you would want to read again and again. This is because there is certain air of evilness surrounding the entire plot and the ending is pretty grotesque. The characters are all rather bleak and death seems to prevail over every scene and conversation. Symbolism has been used effectively to accentuate the presence of death and homicide. Though there appears to be nothing extraordinary about the story, the only thing that really attracts the attention of the readers is close to perfect development of characters."
Abstract This paper discusses Flannery O'Connor's short story "A GoodMan is Hard to Find". The story is analyzed and presented as an example of supreme irony. The writer shows how the story, steeped in irony is a competition between situational iIrony and tragic irony. The author also illustrates how the plot takes the reader through several unexpected twists ending in numbing tragedy.
From the Paper "The narrative begins innocently enough-comedic even. The family is planning a short vacation to Florida. The matriarch of the family does not want to; preferring instead, to visit her girlhood home in Tennessee. She has read about three escaped convicts. She does not communicate this fear with her family. Perhaps she is not afraid. In her estimation, that happenstance is not likely but certainly worth a few jokes. At this point, the reader is not aware that this information is a portent. Faced with pressure from her son, his wife and her grandchildren, she relents. The next day the family embarks on the short journey across state lines."
Abstract This paper examines the story "A GoodMan is Hard to Find" by Flannery O?Connor, which is set in the South and contains some of the typical Southern attitudes that were prevalent in the area. It demonstrates how these attitudes were deeply rooted through the comments made by the character Grandmother. It looks at how the reality of the character of the Misfit demonstrates the stereotypes about social class and upbringing by contrasting the reality of the character with Grandmother's stereotypes. It shows how the misfit is a significant character in illustrating the prevalence of common misconception in the Southern United States.
From the Paper "The southern stereotypes are recited again and again by Grandmother. Grandmother judges the man by his looks and the clothes he wears, she totally ignores the explanation by the Misfit about stealing them. For Grandmother, it is all about how he looks on the outside now.
"Listen," the grandmother almost screamed, "I know you're a good man. You don't look a bit like you have com- mon blood. I know you must come from nice people? {O"Connor, p. 147). She repeats it again on the same page, "Yes, it's a beautiful day," said the grandmother. "Listen," she said, "you shouldn't call yourself The Misfit because I know you're a good man at heart. I can just look at you and tell " {O"Connor, p. 147)"
Abstract This paper will discuss the central themes in the story "A GoodMan is Hard to Find", by Flannery O'Connor, and seek to extract what author is trying to have us contemplate. By revealing the underlying themes of the story, the major ideas of this great writer can be brought to the surface in a clearly project analysis.
Abstract This three-page undergraduate paper explains the theology behind "difficult sayings" in Flannery O' Connor's "A GoodMan is Hard to Find". The paper will attempt to give the writer's perspective behind the story and the reasons for the use of theology.