Literal convergence means "it is likely to become an intersection or approaches an intersection." However, I think the meaning of this word is changing in literature, in particular, I think that it also contains two different meanings. Therefore, the story named "All things that must be converged" by Flanario Connor influences the title, but the meaning is different. The title does not mean anything in the past, but now it is more important. Not only that, as time goes on, everything will get in the way of God. First of all, this story was written when slaves were released and all blacks fought for their rights and freedom.
"Everything has to converge" FLANNERY O'CONNOR (1965) Just like many of the short stories by FLANNERY O'CONNOR, "everything you must merge" includes concepts of Christian sin and repentance It is. O'Connor is proud of the particular evil involved in this story. As a Catholic, O'Connor believes that the crime against this God is a sinful crime. The depiction of O'Connor is concentrated in the southern part. I am centered on the two Caucasian figures. (See STEREOTYPE) The liberation of life in the position of racist begins with a marital travel to a mother's movement class. When they travel, each personality not only reveals racial prejudice but also reveals serious confrontation to others.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
Flannario Connor's "Must All Merge" was first published in 1964 and is a collection of 1965 short titles of the same title including cultural adaptation, aging, death and death, illness and health, and Africa Included. American experience It is in the newly integrated south of the 1960's and tells the story of Julian, a recent college graduate who is obsessed with his mother too. When an accident with a black woman occurred, his prejudiced mother was suffering from a stroke, Julian felt overwhelming influence of his dependence.
Flannery O'Connor 's short story "All that be Merged" talks about the hero' s thought and feelings about Julian and his mother. Because Julian is fairly understanding the world in which he lives, he is a graduate of a university which is difficult to deal with her mother's and her view of the world. The story begins with Julian and his mother regularly going to YMCA in the city center. Julians are often confused by the mother's feelings towards blacks, they call them lower classes and remind us of the lives of the southern farms. As he found her boring speech troublesome, Julian used every opportunity to oppose her point of view. He often dreams of talking to "a black man who looks very noble," thinking his family as a lover. Despite the impulse to the black people, the black woman sitting next to him bothed him with a bus.