Who Is Julian In Everything That Rises Must Converge?

2026-02-25 02:03:08 101

2 Answers

Ruby
Ruby
2026-03-01 16:16:44
Julian's role in that story hits close to home for me. He's the kind of guy who lectures his mom about racial equality but still expects her to pay his way—total hypocrisy, right? O'Connor paints him as this pretentious college grad who thinks he's woke because he rides the bus with Black passengers, but deep down, he's just using them to feel superior. The moment his mother dies because of his stubbornness? Chilling. It makes you question how much 'progress' is real when it's built on selfishness. That ending sticks with you—no neat lessons, just raw consequences.
Wyatt
Wyatt
2026-03-03 00:18:32
Julian in 'Everything That Rises Must Converge' is such a fascinating character because he embodies this weird mix of intellectual arrogance and crippling dependency. On the surface, he's this educated young man who thinks he's above the racial prejudices of his Southern upbringing, especially compared to his mother, who clings to outdated genteel racism. But here's the kicker—Flannery O'Connor exposes his hypocrisy masterfully. He condemns his mother's bigotry, yet he's financially reliant on her, and his 'enlightened' views are just performative. He doesn't genuinely connect with Black people; he uses them as props to spite his mother. The story's climax, where his mother has a stroke after being struck by a Black woman, shatters his smugness. It's like O'Connor is saying, 'You think you're better? Look at the mess your detachment created.'

What gets me is how Julian's character reflects the broader struggles of the South during integration—people clinging to old hierarchies while pretending to evolve. His mother's hat, a symbol of her 'superiority,' mirrors Julian's own hollow intellectual posturing. The irony is thick: he wants to teach her a lesson about equality, but his lack of empathy makes him just as complicit. O'Connor's genius is in how she strips away his illusions without mercy. By the end, you're left wondering if Julian will ever truly confront his own flaws, or if he'll just keep nursing his resentment. It's a brutal, brilliant character study.
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