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A Critical Analysis Of

‘Revelation’ By Flannery O’Connor Essay, Research Paper


A Critical Analysis of ?Revelation?


by Flannery O?Connor


Flannery O?Connor?s background influenced her to write the short


story ?Revelation.? One important influence on the story is her Southern


upbringing. During her lifetime, Southerners were very prejudiced towards


people of other races and lifestyles. They believed that people who were less


fortunate were inferior to them; therefore, people were labeled as different


things and placed into different social classes. The South provided O?Connor


with the images she needed for her characters. Similarly, this can easily be


identified in her short story ?Revelation.? The characters in the story are


identified by physical characteristics and some are even identified with racial


terms. The main character in the story is actually prejudiced and makes many


statements using racial jargon. For example, Mrs. Turpin, the main character,


refers to the higher class woman as ?well-dressed and pleasant?. She also


labels the teenage girl as ?ugly? and the poor woman as ?white-trashy?.


When Mrs. Turpin converse with her black workers, she often uses the word


?nigger? in her thoughts. These characteristics she gives her characters


definitely reveals the Southern lifestyle which the author, Flannery O?Connor,


was a part of. In addition to her Southern upbringing, another influence on


the story is Flannery O?Connor?s illness. She battled with the lupus disease


which has caused her to use a degree of violence and anger to make her


stories somewhat unhappy. The illness caused a sadness inside of Flannery


O?Connor, and that inner sadness flowed from her body to her paper through


her pen. Although she was sick, O?Connor still felt proud to be who she was.


By comparison, Mrs. Turpin in ?Revelation? has a good disposition about


herself. She is far from perfect, yet she is happy to be who she is. Perhaps


the most important influence on the story is religion. In the words of Robert


McCown, O?Connor?s writing was mainly generated by a most powerful


Christianity which was fed by her Catholic background (McCown, 256).


O?Connor was not only influenced by her own Catholic heritage but by others


as well. Like the other writers from France and England, she is curious about


the actuality of sin and the effect that it has on the presence of mankind. Her


stories and every characteristic about them was Flannery O?Connor?s way of


showing reality and qualities that are determiners of fate and destiny. No


matter which path her stories took her readers, they mostly ended up finding


social truth. This background, together with a believable plot, convincing


characterization, and important literary devices enables Flannery O?Connor in


?Revelation? to develop the theme that sometimes people must look farther


than the surface in order to understand the actions of others.


To develop this theme, O?Connor creates a believable plot by using a


social conflict, the element of surprise, and an unhappy ending. The main


social conflict that appears in this story is not determined until a good portion


of the story has passed. There are, however, incidents that build up to the


actual conflict. The story ?Revelation? has a major and a minor social


conflict. The minor conflict is between Mrs. Turpin and a white-trash


woman. This conflict is born because Mrs. Turpin believes she is in a higher


class than the white-trash woman. The white-trash woman is unintelligent


and uneducated, and Mrs. Turpin is repulsed when she speaks and interrupts


her conversation with someone else. The major social conflict is between


Mrs. Turpin and a teenage girl across from her. This conflict is built up over


the course of the story through rude gestures and facial expressions given by


the teenage girl. For instance, Mrs. Turpin makes a comment about a clock.


The girl looks at the clock and smirks which was followed by another smirk


toward Mrs. Turpin. Mrs. Turpin also acknowledges a look the girl gives her


as the ?ugliest face she has ever seen anyone make? (O?Connor, 394). It was


like the girl has known and disliked Mrs. Turpin all her life. Another element


of plot which reinforces the theme of ?Revelation?, is the element of surprise


which actually brings the main conflict out in the open. O?Connor brings the


conflict out well because the incidents that built up to the actual conflict do


not give away what is going to happen. The action around the conflict is


completely surprising and unpredictable. We are aware the girl dislikes Mrs.


Turpin because of her previous actions. The girl never does anything other


than give dirty looks; therefore, we are not expecting any type of physical


violence between them. When the girl hits Mrs. Turpin in the face with the


book, Mrs. Turpin is conversing with another character and is not talking to


the girl. In this situation, a violent act by the girl is completely unpredictable.


Also, O?Connor uses an unhappy ending for this story. Mrs. Turpin, who is


happy being who she is, does not understand why the girl hated her. She


does not think she is a bad person, and she cannot comprehend why she is


not liked. O?Connor ends the story with Mrs. Turpin?s questions unanswered


which leaves her with a sadness that is unsolvable. Through the use of social


conflict, the element of surprise, and an unhappy ending, a believable p

lot is


created.


To further develop the theme, O?Connor uses consistent behavior, clear


motivation, and plausibility to create convincing characterization. The


protagonist, Mrs. Turpin, is convincing because she consistently curious and


involved in conversation. She is also consistently observant of the other


characters. Over the course of the story, Mrs. Turpin does not change;


therefore, she is a static character. O?Connor?s characters are victimized and


are images of lower intelligence. Mrs. Turpin, however, does appear to be of


average intelligence. Her behavior in the story mirrors the Southern image


given to her by O?Connor. In the beginning of ?Revelation,? Mrs. Turpin is


a polite and outgoing individual, and these are characteristics that remain with


her. In addition to consistent behavior, Mrs. Turpin is convincing because


she is mainly motivated by her insecurity. Her motivation for appearing at the


doctor?s office is clearly because her husband is injured. She also feels a


need to observe the other patients so she can draw conclusions as to why they


are there. Mrs. Turpin is a friendly and curious woman which explains her


continuous conversations with anyone who will listen. Even though she


notices the hatred given off by the teenage girl, she continues to act ignorant


of it. A possible motivation for her continued talking could be that she is


deterring from a confrontation. Another characteristic of Mrs. Turpin is her


plausibility. In this story, she is very plausible because her personality and


characteristics model those of a lifelike person. She is curious and observant


just like everyone else and she also enjoys a friendly conversation. O?Connor


makes Mrs. Turpin an average Southern citizen with an average Southern


attitude. With these characteristics given to her, Mrs. Turpin has become a


plausible protagonist in the story ?Revelation.? Through consistent behavior,


clear motivation, and plausibility, convincing characterization of the


protagonist is developed by O?Connor.


O?Connor?s use of important literary devices such as symbolism and


foreshadowing allow her to reinforce the theme. Many think of O?Connor?s


writing as humorous. In most of her stories, she uses a technique that is, for


the most part, comic. Humor is one way O?Connor masks what she is


actually trying to say. She was considered a tragic ironist which wasn?t


understood by some people. O?Connor?s stories also include much


symbolism like in her story ?Revelation.? In this story, there are several


points of symbolism. The teenage girl extremely dislikes Mrs. Turpin from


the beginning of the story to the end of the story. Her dislike grows


throughout the story and then erupts like a volcano. When her anger erupts,


she throws a book at Mrs. Turpin. This book symbolizes her hatred toward


Mrs. Turpin. It symbolizes her hatred because in a book, the plot develops


and builds up over the course of the book. This is exactly what her anger did


toward Mrs. Turpin. The book is not the only symbolism in ?Revelation.? In


the doctor?s office, there are several types of people. These different types of


people symbolize the different types of social classes. For example, the


white-trashy woman represents the lowest class with uneducated intelligence,


the well-dressed woman represents a class of higher standards and


intelligence along with an educated background, and Mrs. Turpin represents a


middle, working class with average intelligence and educated background.


Another literary device O?Connor uses is foreshadowing. The facial


expressions and actions of the girl show a conflict between her and Mrs.


Turpin. Specifically, the smirks given toward Mrs. Turpin and the grunts


made when Mrs. Turpin speaks were the rude gestures from the teenage girl.


The increase of these rude gestures foreshadows a confrontation between the


two, but the actual time of the confrontation is unclear. In conclusion,


symbolism and foreshadowing are two important literary devices used by


O?Connor in ?Revelation.?


After analyzing how the author?s background, the plot, and the literary


devices contribute to the development of the theme of ?Revelation?, one


understands why this story rates high on the literary scale of value.


?Revelation? was a doorway for Flannery O?Connor. She used this doorway


to reveal her beliefs and disbeliefs about mankind and the mysteries that it


beholds. O?Connor was influenced many ways throughout her lifetime and it


was her writing that helped her deal with the problems she faced and the


things she believed in. ?Revelation? was just one of her many stories that


served as a translator of her past. It was through this story that O?Connor


revealed her outlook on prejudice and the effects that some people had on the


human race. O?Connor achieved her purpose because she successfully


portrayed her characters in the manner most suitable to convince her readers.


O?Connor needed to express her concern and curiosity toward life and death,


mainly death. She might have also been looking for a way to cope with death


by writing her stories. ?Revelation? was her way of suppressing her anger


toward people of lower standards. She suppressed her anger by writing what


she thought about them; therefore, releasing herself from the anger she felt.


She was a Southern writer, and from this writing habit she rec

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