Analysis Of A Good Man Is Hard To Find

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Answering to Consciences; “A Good Man is Hard to Find” In “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, by Flannery O’Connor (1953), the reader can see multiple cases of foreshadowing, and situational irony throughout the story. The grandmother has been depicted as a southern raised women who 's name remains a mystery throughout the story. She is characterized and holds all the traits of the protagonist and often finds secretive ways to benefit herself. The opening scenes provide the reader with an intuition that there is a killer on the loose that goes by the nickname Misfit, and he is going to be in the area of where the family is planning on traveling to. The grandmother has been distinguished as criticizing others and often finds devious ways to make herself happy as well as holding money more valuable than anything. The grandmother’s manipulative ways as well as her actions are what decides the fate of …show more content…

In analyzing “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, critics tend to focus on the irony and substantial moral code the grandmother and Misfit have in common. Kathleen G. Ocshorn Professor at the University of Tampa has specifically written about how “The Misfit and the grandmother are bound by their concern with appearances and superficial respectability” (par 16). This specifically points out the internal relationship O’Connor intended on making between the two characters when writing the story. In comparison to Stanley Renner, a man who has made his name through literary criticism, notes that; “Now as the grandmother, deaf to his plea for understanding, reminds him of Jesus, he sees her as the blank wall of Authority, as yet another manifestation of the institutionalized standard of Jesus centered goodness that has plagued his entire life” (par19). Through these quotes we can begin to see a trend of what critics believe and a bridge between the two main character’s

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