Flannery O’Connor (1925-1964) is known
as a creative for her body of literary work; she wrote several stories, the
most famous of which is “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” and two novels (Wise Blood and The Violent Bear It Away). She attended the Iowa Writers’ Workshop
and Yaddo; she counted several impressive literary contemporaries as friends.
By all means, she was good at what she did. But what has most impressed me
about O’Connor is not her literature—although I have read all of it, and it is
spectacularly moving—but the way in which she conducted her daily life.
There are three realities of
Flannery O’Connor’s life that allowed her to be as especially cognizant of her
existence as she was. The first is that she was diagnosed with lupus at a
relatively young age; the second is that she maintained a prolific number of
pen-pals; the third, her Catholic faith. Being diagnosed with lupus in the 1940s
was far different from today; although treatments had improved from where they
had been when O’Connor’s father died of it in her childhood, they were not yet
as effective as they are today. The standard of treatment, combined with the reality
of her father’s death from the same disease, made O’Connor hyperaware of her
mortality, and, I believe, motivated her to create as much as she could with
the time she had. Her faith played a role in her firm belief in the need to be
creative as well, and her numerous pen pals continued to push her thought in
new and different directions throughout her life. I am sure that her correspondences,
particularly those with Maryat Lee and a friend only identified as “A.” in the
collection of letters published posthumously by close friend Sally Fitzgerald,
impacted the direction her fiction took, but more importantly, those correspondences
impacted the direction of her thought and her life. It is this aspect of
Flannery O’Connor’s existence that has made the most impact on my own, thanks
to reading The Habit of Being (the
letter collection), and that most clearly illustrates the importance of
collaboration in creativity.
Flannery’s correspondence with Maryat
Lee reminds me of the collaboration between Kahneman and Tversky in this week’s
reading. The two women shared several background characteristics, but were
diametrically opposed in personality, belief, and life trajectory. Where O’Connor
was chronically ill, shrewd, pragmatic, devoutly Catholicic, and rarely strayed
from her Midgeville, Georgia farm, Lee was an adventurous, theater-writing
expat who grabbed at opportunities as they arose and questioned everything that
Flannery held close. This tangential sharing of domain but opposition in just
about everything else mirrors the relationship Kahneman and Tversky started out
with, and I believe is what made both such forceful pairs. Although O’Connor
and Lee never collaborated or published together, they regularly edited for
each other, and their exchanges in The
Habit of Being are simultaneously the most hilarious and profound things I
have had the pleasure of reading. From both of these relationships, I can only
conclude that conversing with people who share the language of your domain, but
have little else in common, is one of the greatest things a person can do to
expand their thought, whether that be in their creative domain or in their
everyday existence.
Sources and Additional
Reading:
The Habit of Being, Letters of Flannery O’Connor, edited by Sally
Fitzgerald
Flannery – A Life of Flannery O’Connor, by Brad Gooch
“The
Two Friends Who Changed How We Think About How We Think,” by Cass R.
Sunstein and Richard Thaler for the New Yorker Magazine
Photo from The National Catholic Register
Photo from The National Catholic Register
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