Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O 'Connor Draft In the beginning of this short story everything seems simple. It talks about a mother and his son, and how the son is an intelligent liberal man while on the other hand his mom was small minded and prejudice. In this O’Connor story he makes it simple to understand, he didn’t use a lot of imagery or abstract symbolism. The plot of the story is simple as well, it starts off with the mother getting ready for her son to take her to a place where she will lose weight since her doctor recommended it. They plan on taking the bus to their destination and on the bus the mom talks about segregation and is being a real bigot. The son tries to show her that things are different know by trying …show more content…
In my opinion, his mom is still living in the past she doesn’t try to come off as a racist but in the end what she always says and does makes her one. She still has the mindset that whites are superior to blacks that they were all different but equal. On the other hand, to me Julian had completely different views from his mother. While his mother had “foolish views” and a small mind, Julian was bright and open to the new things. Even tough, Julian and his moms’ views were completely different they still were a like in some way. For example, both Julian and his mom cared much about their appearance. His mom would wear rich, exaggerating clothes like the “hat” she had on, to hide the fact that she doesn’t have her family wealth no more. Julian presents himself as an educated guy, he uses this appearance to differentiate himself from those around him. Even though Julian doesn’t like how his mom views the world, he low-key acts like his mother in a way he also resents the fact that his family has no more …show more content…
Chestny, is that she doesn’t try to hide the fact that she perceives herself as superior than others she accepts it and speaks her mind. Unlike her son she acts on what she says and she isn’t hypocritical. Julian likes to show the fact that he has an educational career, he thinks he understand the blacks and tries to sympathize with them by striking intellectual conversations with black that are dressed nice, like he tried to strike up a conversation with the black man that was wearing a suit and looked presentable, he also tried to strike up a conversation with a black women. In this O’Connor story I believe that there are only two things that symbolize something. The first is the penny that the mom had given Carver. In my opinion it represents the condescending attitude she has over African Americans. Even though his mom is trying to be nice by giving him some money, it shows that she thinks that automatically since they are black that they need money or help from someone superior as herself, to me it seems like she feels that African Americans are still depending on whites like they did back then when they were
...eir lifehave felt and seen themselves as just that. That’s why as the author grew up in his southerncommunity, which use to in slave the Black’s “Separate Pasts” helps you see a different waywithout using the sense I violence but using words to promote change in one’s mind set. Hedescribed the tension between both communities very well. The way the book was writing in firstperson really helped readers see that these thoughts , and worries and compassion was really felttowards this situation that was going on at the time with different societies. The fact that theMcLaurin was a white person changed the views, that yeah he was considered a superior beingbut to him he saw it different he used words to try to change his peers views and traditionalways. McLaurin try to remove the concept of fear so that both communities could see them selfas people and as equal races.
The mother is a selfish and stubborn woman. Raised a certain way and never falters from it. She neglects help, oppresses education and persuades people to be what she wants or she will cut them out of her life completely. Her own morals out-weight every other family member’s wants and choices. Her influence and discipline brought every member of the family’s future to serious-danger to care to her wants. She is everything a good mother isn’t and is blind with her own morals. Her stubbornness towards change and education caused the families state of desperation. The realization shown through the story is the family would be better off without a mother to anchor them down.
The story of Anne's childhood must be appreciated in order to understand where her drive, inspiration, and motivation were born. As Anne watches her parents go through the tough times in the South, Anne doesn't understand the reasons as to why their life must this way. In the 1940's, at the time of her youth, Mississippi built on the foundations of segregation. Her mother and father would work out in the fields leaving Anne and her siblings home to raise themselves. Their home consisted of one room and was in no comparison to their white neighbors, bosses. At a very young age Anne began to notice the differences in the ways that they were treated versus ...
...to take it anymore. Julian's mother didn't realize this, she thought she was being "gracious." The stroke Julian's mother receives at the end is a direct result of her failure to adapt to her current setting.
This passage bothered me. It is probably the part that bugged me the most about this book. There are many African Americans who are better behaved, smarter, more artistic, more athletic, etc. then white children. There are also many African Americans who are less educated and more poorly behaved than white children, but the same for both of these things go with white children. It bothers me that she knows that if the worst child in the class was white she wouldn't care if the best child in the class was white. I think that throughout the book she often generalizes with African Americans and doesn't even realize it. She claims that she is getting better, but I don't think that she really is. She keeps trying to have the African American children become the same as the white children.
Herbert Blumer noted that people act toward others based on the meaning they give them. The meaning we assign to someone is shown by the language we use toward that person. Words we use have default assumptions, and people label others with words. Thought then comes into play as we modify our interpretation of what we see by our thought process. The thought process includes someone taking the role of the other. You imagine you are someone else who is viewing you, and sometimes act as that person would act. A lot of the people in the movie, The Blind Side, act differently toward Michael Oher based on the meaning they assign to him, and they give him different labels. Those labels are mostly negative because people see Michael him with ratty clothes, nowhere to live, and always failing school. Michael Oher’s mom in the movie, Leigh Anne Tuohy (Sandra Bullock), and her family represent love and caring. Michael starts showing love and caring. When he goes back to the “hood” with his old friends, they represent problems, and he doesn’t want to be problematic, so he stays away from
No matter what Julian or any one else says, she will not relinquish those practices. She glorifies the fact that her grandfather was a plantation owner with one hundred slaves and dismisses the plights of blacks by saying, "They should rise, yes, but on their own side of the fence". It is clear that his mother has difficulty dealing with the changes of today’s current society. Evidence that times have change is given by the fact that the colored woman sitting on the bus was wearing the same hat Julian’s mother was wearing. This indicates that not only white women of statue now wear big hats. Julian’s mother is put in her place when the woman with the big hat refuses her charity of a penny to her little boy. Julian has a lot to offer to his mother in how the new world is changing, and his mother can teach him the history racism.
In this part of the essay, I will show how O'Connor made use of symbolism through her characters to symbolise an abstraction of class-consciousness. The issues of class consciousness was brought up through the rounded character of the grandmother, who is the protagonist of the story. On the surface, we see the characteristics of the grandmother portrayed as a "good" woman, having faith in God and doing right in her live. However, the sin lies within her, whereby she thinks she is better than others around her. Viewing appearance and self-image as important, which is reflected through her gentility, the grandmother wears "white cotton gloves, straw sailor hat with a bunch of white violets on the brim, navy blue dress with a small white dot in the print and the collars and cuffs were white organdy trimmed with lace" (p.2117). Through her attire, the grandmother implies that people who looked at her will know that she is a respectable and noble lady. Repetitive use of the colour white is symbolic as it reflects the way the grandmother perceives and associates herself with - perfection, goodness, and purity. The grandmother also predicts that she would have done well if she had married Mr. Teagarden, "who had died a wealthy man few years ag...
One of the symbols used in this short story is the hat that Julian’s mother and the black woman on the bus wear. Ironically, these hats represent both women sharing the same rights and equalities; both races ride the same bus, sitting in the same seats; and both like the same fashions. Another symbol is the penny that Julian’s mother gives to the little black boy, representing th...
Flannery O’Connor was an extremely revered author for his writing techniques that may be examined throughout almost all of his pieces, especially in: “Everything That Rises Must Converge” and “Greenleaf”. Both of these short stories hone in on the two most controversial topics in societal history: religion and race. And with that, “Everything That Rises Must Converge”, a short story in the collection Everything That Rises Must Converge, is a brief tale from a third person point of view, set in the late 1960s; that of an old mother and her young adult son, Julian, who the story focuses on. He is a College graduate that’s too caught up in his own self-proclaimed brilliant mind and knows his mother is too bigoted to deal with the integration of African Americans into white communities. The story moves with an argument between the two about how African Americans really behave. All the while, he is helping her get to The Y for her weekly weight-loss class. She whimpers often about her terribly ugly hat and wanting to return it, but stubbornly gets on the bus continuing to discuss African American integration being wrong. After they board the bus and the whites make comments about it lacking any blacks, An African American gentleman in a suit enters and Julian sits by him to attempt to spite his mother, and then an African American lady and her son enter who ironically dons the identical hat to Julian’s mother. She is playful with the child but is seen as a racist when she tries to offer him a penny. She is denied when the child’s mother views it as an act of pity and Julian thinks that he has finally won the argument but is interrupted when his mother has a stroke. The story ends with Julian shouting for help. While this story focuses ...
The irony at the end of this story is very interesting. O’ Connor forces the reader to wonder which characters are “Good Men”, perhaps by the end of the story she is trying to convey two points: first, that a discerning “Good Man” can be very difficult, second that a manipulative, self centered, and hollow character: The Grandmother is a devastating way to be, both for a person individually and for everyone else around them. The reader is at least left wondering if some or all of the clues to irony I provided apply in some way to the outcome of this story.
This story takes place in the south during the civil rights movement when people were trying to eliminate poverty and racism from the society that they lived in. There are four important characters in this story, and the two main ones are Julian and his mother. Julian is a recent college graduate who lives with his mother but knows “some day [he’ll] start making money” (Mays 448). Julian sees the world as ever changing during the civil rights movement and does not like or condone racism. Although this is true he subconsciously is small minded and petty just like his mother. His mother often makes racist remarks and will not find herself sitting next to a black African American adult. She often would bring up the topic of race to Julian “every few days like a train on an open track” (Mays 449). She also makes her son ride the bus with her to the YMCA because of the new changes due to the civil rights movement and in some ways this makes Julian mad. As they begin to board the bus Julian and his mother argue but quickly board. Shortly later a black woman and her son named Carver board. Carver sits next to Julian’s mother, she does not mind, and Carver’s mother sits next to Julian. Carver’s mother is an impatient woman who ironically wears the same hat as Julian’s mother. The hat in many ways is a symbol of the ever changing south during the civil rights movement. It symbolizes the social equality between
“Everything that Rises Must Converge” also contains two supposedly superior characters, Julian and his mother. Julian’s mother believes that she is superior because her grandfather was a former governor, a prosperous landowner with two-hundred slaves. She also believes that being white makes her superior to people of other races. She believes that those people should rise, but “on their own side of the fence” (pg. 214). Later in the story she offends a “Negro” woman by her patronizing treatment of the woman’s child. This woman is so upset that she physically attacks Julian’s mother (pg. 221). Julian also sees himself as superior. He feels superior to his mother because he does not see himself as racist. In reality he is as much a racist as his mother, but he shows his racism in a different way, seeking out those who he terms “some of the better types” to befriend (pg.
In the beginning of the short story O’Connor’s use of a dark and humorous tone allows the audience to feel pity for the grandmother. The first sentence, “The grandmother didn’t want to go to Florida” shows the reader the family does not worry about the grandmother’s
O’Connor emphasized human problem and use spiritual words to connect the grandmother character with everyone. This family uses a traditional vacation that families go on every year to show daily problem, attitudes and emotion while on a road trip. O’Connor use language in the South to tell the story. I think the grandmother use various types of language to express her thoughts and feeling. The author push the audiences to feel the amount of pride the grandmother have when it comes to identifying what she wants. O’Connor shows how dominant the grandmother is when she does an excellent job in persuading the family to go where she wants to go. This is a perfect example of the amount of manipulate the grandmother use throughout the story.