With his
mastery of modernist technique and his depictions of characters
obsessed with the past, Nobel laureate William Faulkner raised the
bar for southern fiction writers. But the work of two later authors
shows that the aesthetic of memory is not enough: Confederate
thunder fades as they turn to an explicitly religious source of
meaning.
According to
John Sykes, the fiction of Flannery O’Connor and Walker Percy provides
occasions for divine revelation. He traces their work from its common
roots in midcentury southern and Catholic intellectual life to show how
the two adopted different theological emphases and rhetorical
strategies—O’Connor building to climactic images, Percy striving for
dialogue with the reader—as a means of uncovering the sacramental
foundation of the created order.
Sykes sets
O’Connor and Percy against the background of the Southern Renaissance
from which they emerged, showing not only how they shared a distinctly
Christian notion of art that led them to see fiction as revelatory but
also how their methods of revelation took them in different directions.
Yet, despite their differences in strategy and emphasis, he argues that
the two are united in their conception of the artist as “God’s
sharp-eyed witness,” and he connects them with the philosophers and
critics, both Christian and non-Christian, who had a meaningful
influence on their work.
Through
sustained readings of key texts—particularly such O’Connor stories as
“The Artificial Nigger” and “The Geranium” and Percy’s novels Love in
the Ruins and The Second Coming—Sykes focuses on the
intertwined themes of revelation, sacrament, and community. He views
their work in relation to the theological difficulties that they were
not able to overcome concerning community. For both writers, the
question of community is further complicated by the changing nature of
the South as the Lost Cause and segregation lose their holds and a new
form of prosperity arises.
By disclosing
how O’Connor and Percy made aesthetic choices based on their Catholicism
and their belief that fiction by its very nature is revelatory, Sykes
demonstrates that their work cannot be seen as merely a continuation of
the historical aesthetic that dominated southern literature for so long.
Flannery O’Connor, Walker Percy, and the Aesthetic of Revelation
is theoretically sophisticated without being esoteric and is accessible
to any reader with a serious interest in these writers, brimming with
fresh insights about both that clarify their approaches to art and
enrich our understanding of their work.
About the Author
John D. Sykes, Jr., is Professor of English at Wingate
University and author of The Romance of Innocence and the Myth of
History: Faulkner’s Religious Critique of Southern Culture. He lives
in Wingate, North Carolina.