The Significance Of Names In Flannery O Connor's Good Country People

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In short stories, it is essential for the author to include literary devices that enhance the theme of the story while also giving the reader a better understanding of the deeper meaning. In Flannery O’Conner’s short story “Good Country People” the character’s names carry a deeper significance than readers initially understand. Each of the names has an element to it that portrays the opposite nature of the character. The author uses the irony of the characters' names as a thematic device that reveals the contrast between their perceived identities and their true natures. At the beginning and end of the story, we hear two women talking, Mrs. Hopewell and Mrs. Freeman. Distky states that “ironically, too, are the names of the two women whose …show more content…

Joy legally changed her name to Hulga “as soon as she was twenty-one and away from home” (O’Connor). The name was changed from Joy to Hulga for multiple reasons. Firstly, due to an accident that caused her to have a wooden leg, she began to see herself as ugly. Her original name Joy, one of the “most beautiful names” was changed to Hulga, the “ugliest name in any language” (O’Connor). Hulga claims that she changed her name because the new name “addressed her identity candidly” (Ditsky). Secondly, she sees life as meaningless, so choosing the name Hulga may be a way for her to express her existential disillusionment. Finally, it is clear that Hulga sees herself as intellectually superior to others around her. Changing her name may be a way for her to distance herself from the simplistic and naive outlooks of the other characters. All of these examples show that she is not like any of the other characters as she is the only character to reject the normalities of society. In conclusion, the author of the short story “Good Country People” gives the characters ironic names as a literary device to reveal the theme and show a contrast between their perceived identities and their true

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