29 Results for crime and punishment

The Branded Mother and her Throwaway Child The Scarlet Letter is a story of hypocrisy and punishment. The strict Puritan laws made adultery a sin punishable by death or a life of misery. Although being an unwed mother or an illegitimate child is no longer a crime leading to capi...
Can a theocracy be an effective type of government? Many object to this idea, but it was the basis of the Puritan religion, which reformed against the Catholic Church of England by placing their religion in the New England area. Theocracy is a government in which the church leaders are also the st...
The Scarlet Letter - Individuality within a Puritan Society Often in society people are criticized, punished and despised for their individual choices and flaws. In the novel, The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the author attempts to show the way society casts out individuals simply beca...
Throughout the novel, Pearl remains the reminder of the sin that Hester committed, this is her symbolic importance. Many of the characters in this novel suffer the consequences of their sins, however, none seem to suffer as much as Pearl. Despite the fact that she has committed no crime to society, ...
"The dungeons were never empty; the streets of almost every village echoed daily with the lash; the life of a woman, whose mild and Christian spirit no cruelty could embitter, had been sacrificed; and more innocent blood was yet to pollute the hands that were so often raised in prayer." (...
Romanticism is categorized as "a preference for simplicity and naturalness, a love of plain feelings and truth to common place reality, especially as found in natural scenes". Nathaniel Hawthorne was an anti-transcendentalist and believed in the dark side of man, hence his dark romant...
Chapter 1: "The Prison Door" 1.) The two landmarks represent not only the "practical necessities" of the society, but it is also a sign that all societies, regardless of their good intentions, eventually succumb to the realities of man's nature (sin/punishment/prison) ...
The Scarlet Letter There were many great works of writing during the romantic period of writing. Many works that captured the readers imagination. They would give people thoughts and fantasies of things that could happen. It used many depictions of and how things were during that time period....
In Adam"s fall, we sinned all." This old Sunday-school saying applies well to Nathaniel Hawthorne's characters in The Scarlet Letter. The main characters, Hester Prynne, Arthur Dimmesdale, Roger Chillingworth, as well as the townspeople, all sinned. The story is a study of the effects of sin ...
According to the New England Primer, a basic textbook used during Puritan times, *In Adam*s fall, we sinned all.* This quote very much applies to Nathaniel Hawthorne*s characters in The Scarlet Letter. The main characters, Hester Prynne, Arthur Dimmesdale, Roger Chillingworth, and the Puritan societ...
The Symbolism of Red and Black in "The Scarlet Letter" Hawthorne uses red and black imagery to reveal a secret, a character's emotion, or the truth about a character. The red and black symbolism advances the story. He sometimes uses red and black in nature, with flowers or the sky....
In early American Puritanism, women who\'d committed adultery were forced to wear a letter \"A\" was worn as a punishment, to cause shame, to draw attention to the woman\'s sin. This may not have been clearly and directly stated to the reader, but throughout reading the book, you gather possible hid...
Throughout time, the human race has fought an on-going battle of lies and guilt from internal forces that divides the heart from the brain. In a community, especially one of high religious expectations, people suffer the warfare of every challenging consequence conceivable in order to alleviate th...
Final Prep: Hawthorne, Miller, Clemens, Crane The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawtorne takes place in the seventeenth century, New England colony of Massachusetts. Hester Prynne is the protagonist of the novel. She is an English woman and the wife of Roger Chillingworth. She is tried and con...
The Scarlet Terror Question: How does Hawthorne build terror in "The Scarlet Letter"? Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter" is mostly remembered as a romantic romance story about a Puritan woman and a minister who falls in love, but is regrettably separated by the ac...
Scarlet Letter contains a countless amount of symbolism that at some times confuses the reader but always keeps them thinking. There are so many things that have meanings and significance to them which makes the novel worth while. In this essay, these things will be revealed. The first example...
Sin lives within us all. Some of us, either by choice or by a forced hand, carry our sins for all to see. Others keep their secrets deep within the darkest, most secretive recesses of their very being. Then there are sti...
Symbolism can be defined as the representation of a person, place or thing in anotherformat. Symbolism exists everywhere throughout life and describes different aspects of aperson. Symbolism is most evident in literature through novels and other forms offiction. Most anything in a novel can have ...
In Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne seems to intimate that what Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmsdale shared wasn't quite as sinful as is supposed. The real sin seems to lie in the marriage of Hester with Chillingworth. Similarly, "A Pair of Eyes; or Modern Magic" by Louisa May Alcott also por...
In an attempt to redeem his name and honor from the shame of William Hathorne and his son, John Hathorne's actions during the Salem Witchcraft trails, Nathaniel Hawthorne created a cast of characters in The Scarlett Letter who, through the course of the novel try to gain redemption for their ow...
If we cannot accept our own identity, how are we supposed to accept and eventually love others just like us? In the novel The Scarlet letter, Nathaniel Hawthorn addresses the issue of accepting ourselves before we can accept and love others. Hawthorn expresses this issue through the relationships ...
Young Goodman Brown In Young Goodman Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne tells the tale of a man and his discovery of evil. Hawthorne's primary concern is with evil and how it affects young Goodman Brown. Through the use of tone and setting, Hawthorne portrays the nature of evil and the psycho...
"Love, whether newly born, or aroused from a deathlike slumber, must always create a sunshine, filling the heart so full of radiance that it overflows upon the outward world" (Hawthorne 193). More than a tale of sin, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne is also an intense love story. His master...
characterization of the townspeople as unforgiving and bloodthirsty individuals serves to heighten the guilt felt by the novel's sinners. Roger Chillingworth is an erudite, scholarly physician, and Hester's husband. His and Hester's marriage was arranged by Hester's parents, despite the large differ...
The Effective Use of SymbolismThe novel, The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne is an intriguing account of a Puritan community that experiences a breakdown in beliefs. The story deals with a woman, Hester, who commits adultery with a Calvinistic minister resulting in the birth of a child (Mart...