Flannery O´Connor in the chapter “Revelation” of her book “Everything that rises must converge,” shows how ignorance can cloud goodness of people. The main character of this story is Mrs. Turpin, a white home-and-land owner living at the time of slavery in America. Through the development of the story, she looks as a Philanthropist woman with strong Christian bases. However, her role of a kindly religious woman is overshadowed due the strong tendency to racism and classism that she shows. For example, when she in classifying people claims, “On the bottom of the heap were most colored people” and next to them “the white-trash” (O´Connor 195). One may think that her
Flannery O´Connor in the chapter “Revelation” of her book “Everything that rises must converge,” shows how ignorance can cloud goodness of people. The main character of this story is Mrs. Turpin, a white home-and-land owner living at the time of slavery in America. Through the development of the story, she looks as a Philanthropist woman with strong Christian bases. However, her role of a kindly religious woman is overshadowed due the strong tendency to racism and classism that she shows. For example, when she in classifying people claims, “On the bottom of the heap were most colored people” and next to them “the white-trash” (O´Connor 195). One may think that her