Compare And Contrast The Grandmother And A Good Man Is Hard To Find

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1. Christian Belief
‘The Misfit Versus the Grandmother Flannery O’Connor’s short story “A Good Man is Hard to Find” is written partially to “convert” people who have not yet fully accepted the Christian faith. O’Connor, herself being a strong believer in Christianity, probably thought that writing this story will help make people who aren’t living by the Christian guidelines to extremely consider doing so. Flannery O'Connor sound deeply concerned with the standards and the direction of the youth at that time. She believes that Christ was no longer enough of a priority to the people of her generation. According to the short story, “the grandmother fights on behalf of blood: she dresses like a lady, she rebukes rudeness wherever she sees it, …show more content…

An example of this, in "A Good Man is Hard to Find," involves the Grandmother's strong, southern heritage. According to the article, she tells her grandchildren a story in which a watermelon is devoured by "a nigger boy (Bandy 108)." In today’s world, grandmothers are usually nice and sweet, but O’Connor’s grandmother is very manipulative, domineering women who talk way too much for her and her family’s own good. Then, the Misfit, whom she "knows" is of quality, southern blood, shoots her and her family, despite her belief in southern hospitality. The Grandmother is a woman who believes in God, but it seems that her belief isn’t strong up until her confrontation with the …show more content…

He’s the most dangerous criminal, and the Grandmother knows that. It seems she wants to buy herself time by having a conversation with The Misfit. The Misfit seems to be having a nice conversation because he was talking about his life and the meaning behind his name. He explains in their conversation why he calls himself “The Misfit”, according to the story, “I can’t make what all I done wrong fit what all I gone through in punishment.”. So, he named himself The Misfit, because of the wrong things he had done in the past. He talked about how his dad had something to do with him being what he is. “My daddy said I was a different breed of dog from my brothers and sisters.” It seems that his father knew he was different in a bad way and he expresses it with his son The Misfit. For him, murdering people is only to give them a punishment they deserved, but killing the Grandmother is justified as the ultimate punishment for her sins of manipulation and deviousness. According to the Article from Bethea, “like Satan, The Misfit is an anti-Christ. Jesus loved children, whereas children make the anti-Christ Misfit ‘nervous’’. The Misfit has already directed the execution of the Grandmother's entire family, and it must be obvious to all, including reader and Grandmother, that she is the next to die. But she struggles on. Grasping at any appeal, and hardly aware of what she is saying, the

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