All four character have different personality and distinct feeling about the others, may be some of them are misunderstanding or completely prejudice or insult, scorn, disrespect
I think that the relationships between each people are literally superficial, since even mother and child don't know well each other, the mother even does not tries to under stand, for instance when Mrs. Hopewell finds Joy's philosophy book in her room, she feels " it seemed to her " an evil incantation in gibberish" In this story, the distance …show more content…
Freeman? How does she play around and affect Joy's life? I think her role in this story is an evil like Manley Pointer does. She is sort of gossip, noisy and enjoys personal pleasure such as calling Joy the name she chose, although her mother never call. She has strange interests, this is actually reason why she calls Joy the name" Hulga", she is intrigued by Joy's wooden leg.
Mrs. Hopewell is an optimist and incapable of understanding her child. I think she is naïve and superficial. I think she is a typical southern woman who has a hospitality to anybody, this idea come from when she invited Manley Pointer, a stranger in to dinner.
She absolutely feels superior to Manley Pointer, O'Connor write that " he may be the salt of the earth but she obviously thinks she is better than he is" This exemplifies her arrogance, even though she admit him, because she is materially wealthy since by running her and maintain social position.
Joy changes her name because she dislikes her mother. Her wood leg gives us sense of how ugly and deformed she is, and how she has been struggling with that fact for