The Use of Violence in Flannery O'Connor's Stories

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The main recurring theme in Flannery O’Connor’s stories is the use of violence towards characters in order to give them an eye-opening moment in which they finally realize their true self in relation to the rest of society and openly accept insight into how they should act or think. This theme of violence can clearly be seen in three works by Flannery O’Connor: A Good Man is Hard to Find, Good Country People, and Everything That Rises Must Converge.

In A Good Man is Hard to Find, the grandmother and the Misfit both experience a life-changing event that leads to them having a clear understanding of who they should truly be. After the Misfit kills the rest of the family, the grandmother is left alone with the Misfit in the ditch. Once she sees the Misfit wearing her now dead son’s shirt, she is reminded that the Misfit is no worse than she is (Whitt 47). She is reminded of her son because of the shirt, but this thought inspires an even deeper understanding and thought beyond being confused as to why he is wearing that shirt (Whitt 47-48). She goes as far as to tell the Misfit “Why you’re one of my babies. You’re one of my own children!” (Whitt 47). She realizes that her beliefs and thoughts of the old fashioned southern social class structure that everyone must be good or they must be beneath an individual do not make sense or is applicable when faced with a serious event in life such as death (Whitt 47). The Misfit is taken back by what the grandmother has said to him and quickly shoots her three times without thought, as if by instinct, “as if a snake had bitten him” (Whitt 48). The truth that the grandmother speaks is too much for the Misfit to the point that he violently tries to reject it. Even though the grandmother is dead...

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...life of all individuals: a life in which the past and the future can be faced head on and wrongs can be made right while continuing to embrace life that is yet to come (Moore).

In conclusion, Flannery O’Connor used violence in her short stories in order to give her characters an event that changes their entire viewpoint, beliefs, and actions in life and shows them the reality of it. These acts of violence can be seen in A Good Man is Hard to Find, Good Country People, and Everything that Rises Must Converge.

Works Cited

Whitt, Margaret. Understanding Flannery O’Connor. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1995. 47-48, 78. Print.

Moore, Julie. “O’Connor’s ‘Everything that Rises Must Converge’ and the Concept of Grace.” Yahoo! Voices. Yahoo! Inc., 2009. Web. 4 Mar 2012. .

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