Irony In A Good Man Is Hard To Find

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Pages: 4

How strong are you in your relationship with God? Would you say that you have already received God's grace, or you need some help achieving it? We are all born as sinners and most of us strive to be washed in the blood of Jesus. It is a long journey that doesn’t stop until death. In O'Connor's "a good man is hard to find," she uses characterization, irony and symbolism to portray the idea that anyone can receive Gods grace.

The grandmother in “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” likes to consider herself superior to others by calling herself a “lady,” and wearing clothes to portray that idea toward others. She freely and frequently passes judgment on others and is selfish throughout the story. She was raised in the south and has no filter so when it comes to derogatory
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The first obvious irony, as I stated before, is the fact that the drawn the conclusion that they could possibly run into this one man. The odds of running into him in the state of Florida are one over a million. Another obvious irony is that the entire reason the family had the accident leading them to meet up with the Misfit is because of the grandmother’s cat that she brought along. The number of graves on the side of the road, however, are important because it is the same amount of people in the car. Another example is when the grandmother begged her son to take her to her old house so she could see it one last time, which was the hideout for the Misfit and his gang, but the house she was referring to was not even in Georgia, it was in Tennessee. The most tragic of all is when the grandmother claims she recognizes the Misfit which forces him to kill the entire family so they cannot go tell the authorities. Therefore, the full story is based upon the irony that the grandmother did not want to go to go on vacation to Florida for the sole purpose of avoiding this murderer, when she, in the end, leads them directly to him and essentially makes him kill them