Thursday, January 23, 2020
Flannery OConnors Good Country People Essay -- Good Country People
Flannery O'Connor's "Good Country People"      In "Good Country People" by Flannery O'Connor, uses symbolism  in the choice of names, almost to the point of being ironic and humorous.   These names center around the personality and demeanor of the characters.   Hulga, once known as Joy, simply changed her name because it was the  ugliest she could think of. Mrs. Freeman's name is ironic because she is  burdened by the land that she works, so is not really free. Mrs. Hopewell?s  name is also ironic, because she trys to provide hope, but is in fact empty in  her talk. Each one of these characters names, Hulga, Mrs. Freeman, and  Mrs. Hopewell, show the symbolism used by Flannery O'Connor.    Hulga, the daughter to Mrs. Hopewell, was actually named Joy at  birth. At the age of ten, Joy lost one of her legs in a hunting accident, and  from that point on became a depressed realist. At the age of twenty one, Joy  moved out of the house, went to college, and legally changed her name to  Hulga. Hulga most likely changes her name to spite her mother, because  Joy is such a beautiful name and Hulga is such an ugly one. ?She [Hulga]  had arrived at it first purely on the basis of its ugly sound and then the full  genius of its fitness had struck her...She saw it as the name of her highest  creative act.? Hulga alo changes her name because of the true way she feels  inside. Hulga is the ugliest name she could think of and it shows her  inability to love or become close to anyone. ?One of...                      
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