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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which compares the life’s values and conduct between these two American short stories. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGgmlot.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
are defined and perpetuated by society and prevailing religious convictions. People become conditioned by their environment, and the values they develop as a direct result are ultimately reflected by
the ways in which they conduct their lives. Flannery OConnor, herself a devout Catholic, considered how religion shaped the ways in which people behaved, and how they made their
lifes choices based upon their determination of "the right thing to do." As OConnors oftentimes shocking short stories reveal, the moral compass one person chooses to follow may be
quite different from that of another, generating conflict which can unfortunately end in tragedy. This is particularly evident in her 1955 short story, "A Good Man is Hard to
Find," which questions so-called fundamentalist Christian morality. When an average Florida family comes face to face with a thief and serial killer, it is traditional values that come under
fire. Shirley Jackson elects to consider how lifes values are maintained in a ritualistic fashion in her chilling 1948 short story, "The Lottery." Jackson emphasizes the dispassionate way
in which people conduct their lives, regulated by values they did not create and dont understand, but dont attempt to change. The rural citizens depicted in the story are
average, everyday people who indulge in senseless human sacrifice that they never question because it has long been a standard mode of conduct which lays the foundation for the values
they espouse. It commences as a rather innocuous family drama, with a "self-centered and morally platitudinous" (Galloway The Dark Side of the Cross: Flannery OConnors Short Fiction) grandmother preparing for
a family vacation with her only living son, the emotionally distant Bailey, his wife, and three young children. The grandmother is spiritually bereft, and in many ways, as emotionally
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