Thursday, October 10, 2019
Good Country People Essay
In Flannery Oââ¬â¢Connorââ¬â¢s short story ââ¬Å"Good Country People,â⬠Hulgaââ¬â¢s arrogance, bitterness, and rebelliousness contribute to her inability to get along with others. Her superior attitude and atheist bent combine to make Hulga a person with few redeeming qualities but an easy target for deception disguised behind a simple mind. It is Hulgaââ¬â¢s arrogance towards other less educated than she, in the end, which prevents her from seeing through the fraud of a dishonest man. Hulgaââ¬â¢s arrogance is displayed from the beginning of ââ¬Å"Good Country Peopleâ⬠. Her motherââ¬â¢s tenant family, the Freemans, have a pair of daughters. Although Glynese and Carramae are ââ¬Å"two of the nicest girls she knewâ⬠(page 165) according to Mrs. Hopewell, Hulga refers them to by the derogatory nicknames of Glycerin and Caramel since she clearly thinks herself intellectually superior. Hulga has a doctorate degree from a university and often reminds her mother that were it not been for her heart problems ââ¬Å"she would be far from these red hills and good country peopleâ⬠(page 168) which she considers far beneath her. In fact, Hulga wants nothing to do with her humble surroundings, declaring that she doesnââ¬â¢t like animals or things in nature or even young men, who blatantly display their general stupidity. Oââ¬â¢Connor sets up this description of Hulga to foreshadow the characterââ¬â¢s reaction when she meets Manley Pointer and ââ¬Å"thinks of it as a great jokeâ⬠(page 173) upon agreeing to meet him for a picnic. Mrs. Hopewellââ¬â¢s physical description of her daughter as ââ¬Å"constant outrageâ⬠¦obliterated every expression from her faceâ⬠(page 166) clearly demonstrates the effect of Hulgaââ¬â¢s bitter attitude and she constantly reminds the girl her face would be much more attractive with a smile. While her mother feels obligated to care for the girl after the unfortunate accident which took her leg, Hulga has rescinded her belief in God and does not allow Mrs. Hopewell to keep a bible in the parlor. She is unrepentant and unrelenting in her bitterness. Hulga has lost so much of her life to this quality and the threat of her medical condition that she feels compelled to lie to Manley Pointer about her age, telling him she is 17 instead of the 32 years sheââ¬â¢s actually lived. Hulga is rebellious against the society of which she disapproves as well as her own mother. She looks down on Mrs. Hopewell and her desire to find ââ¬Å"good country peopleâ⬠(page 166) with which to associate. Impressed to walk the fields with her mother, Hulga manages to make it as uncomfortable as possible with ââ¬Å"remarksâ⬠¦so ugly and her face so glumâ⬠. Hulga smugly responds that that she is merely being herself and this is what her mother gets for asking her to come along. Hulga feels triumphant in legally changing her name into one so ugly that ââ¬Å"her mother had not been able to turn her dust into Joyâ⬠(page 167). She continues to rebel against convention, eagerly accompanying Manley Pointer for a rare opportunity to speak with him regarding what she feels are philosophical subjects. Of course it is this rebelliousness that allows him to take advantage of her. Hulga and her mean spirit, arrogance, bitterness and rebelliousness are the perfect combination to be brought down by a simple con man who need do nothing more than show a bit of interest in the reclusive girl. Through Oââ¬â¢Connorââ¬â¢s characterization the author retells the moral of the fabled tortoise and hare and reminds the reader of the pitfalls of arrogance.
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