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Flannery O’conner: Queen of Irony

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Essay title: Flannery O’conner: Queen of Irony

Flannery O’Connor: Queen of Irony

The literary rebellion, known as realism, established itself in American writing as a direct response to the age of American romanticism’s sentimental and sensationalist prose. As the dominance of New England’s literary culture waned “a host of new writers appeared, among them Bret Harte, William Dean Howells, and Mark Twain, whose background and training, unlike those of the older generation they displaced, were middle-class and journalistic rather than genteel or academic” (McMichael 6). These authors moved from tales of local color fiction to realistic and truthful depictions of the complete panorama of American experience. They wrote about uniquely American subjects in a humorous and everyday language, replete with their character’s misdeeds and shortcomings. Their success in creating this plain but descriptive language, the language of the common man, signaled the end of American reverence for British and European culture and for the more formal use of language associated with those traditions. In essence, these new authors “had what [the author] Henry James called “a powerful impulse to mirror the unmitigated realities of life,” in contrast to the romanticist’s insistence “on the author’s rights to avoid representations of “squalid misery” and to present instead an idealized and “poetic” portrait of life” (McMichael 6).

In contrast to their romantic and realist predecessors, the literary naturalists “emphasized that the world was amoral, that men and women had no freewill, that their lives were controlled by hereditary and the environment, that religious “truths” were illusory, [and] that the destiny of humanity was misery in life and oblivion in death” (McMichael 7). The naturalist writer Stephen Crane, for instance, explored the absurdity of the human condition. His writing most often portrayed humanity as lonesome singular entities relying on their unproven belief in the benevolence of God and freewill, led by their persistent illusions of being the center of the universe, and clueless to the disparity between their greatest expectations and their equalizing bouts of impendent doom. These realist and naturalist writers, with their revolutionary new method of portraying humanity as capable of evil and as likely victims of an often tempestuous environment or seemingly spiteful heredity, were a powerful influence on the writers who followed in their footsteps.

One writer who seems to have evolved as a natural by-product of these two revolutionary literary genres is Flannery Mary O’Connor, a writer whose name is most often associated with stories of violence. She was sometimes referred to as a “Southern Gothic” writer because of her fascination with grotesque incidents and odd complex characters. This use of grotesque humor and the rural southern dialect of her characters were common elements in her short stories. These dark comedies “often [forced] readers to confront physical deformity, spiritual depravity, and the violence they often engender” (Abcarian et al. 1411). “She began writing while a student at Georgia State College for Women in her hometown and in 1947 earned an M.F.A. degree from the University of Iowa” (Abcarian et al. 1411). The author was born March 25, 1925 in Savannah, Georgia and died August 3, 1964 in Milledgeville, Georgia of kidney failure, a complication of disseminated lupus erytyematosus, an incurable blood disease she had been diagnosed with. Two years before the publication of her first novel, when she discovered she was suffering from the blood disease, she moved, with her mother, back to the family home in Milledgeville. Just as the poet Emily Dickinson could write an accurate and intuitive presentation of the society she lived in from the seclusion of her upstairs bedroom, Flannery O’Connor, handicapped by her debility-forced sabbatical to her Milledgeville family home and bound by the theological constrictions of her deep religious faith was able to illuminate, “the conflict between the sacred and the profane, and sometimes their merger, in a grittily regional setting” (Davidson, Wagner-Martin 483).

During her short life she authored two short novels, Wise Blood (1952) and The Violent Bear It Away (1960). In addition, she authored thirty-one short stories published in two separate anthologies, A Good Man Is Hard To Find and Other Stories (1955) and Everything That Rises Must Converge (1965) (Magill, Critical 1756). O’Connor also wrote book reviews, largely for the Catholic press; these are collected in The Presence of Grace (1983), which was compiled by Leo J. Zuber and edited by Carter W. Martin (Magill, Critical 1756). Although the disease would take her life by the age of 39, O’Connor left a corpus of work that has influenced the satiric and ironic rendering of American literature in modern writing

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