People who are fond of creating generalizations are those who wish to fit the story into a neat, little box. Those people that make generalizations might tell us that a piece of fiction must have one or more characters with whom the reader can relate to. The reason being the person on the page is likable or has some qualities that makes the person sympathetic or at least a recognizably authentic human. The same goes for "Everything That Rises Must Converge " by Flannery O "Conner. In this story, the way the characters are portrayed, to some extent, tends to relate to the existing characters in the reality in which I live in. In some situations, there may be a sense of oddity present, however those situations are very likely to be seen in reality. .
There are various types of people that live in today's society and each person has a unique aspect of their character to share with the society. The same goes for the story. Julian is a character in the story that is being demonstrated in such a way. Julian is an embittered college graduate who resides with his mother. He sells typewriters to make a living while he halfheartedly pursues his ambition to be a writer. He has nothing but contempt for his doting mother, whom he believes has foolish, outdated manners. Julian espouses the progressive ideologies of racial equality that he learned in college but finds himself unable to act on them or engage in any meaningful conversation with African Americans. He secretly longs for the comfort and privacy of his grandfather's mansion on the old family plantation, despite his avowed repudiation of his family's status as former slaveholders. On the other hand, there is the question of whether his mother is a middle-aged woman from an old southern family who is enrolled in an exercise class at the YMCA. She made tremendous sacrifices for him so that he could have personal and educational opportunities.