30 Results for the scarlet letter

Some historians say the Puritans were the masters of torture, other historians say they were crazy peasants with no sense of logic or morality, but most historians say they were pure evil. The Puritans were a small society of people whose beliefs branch from the Catholic faith. They were given the n...
The Scarlet Letter - IntoleranceThe Scarlet LetterBy Sarah JohnstonNathaniel Hawthorne used his writing skills to appropriately show the strict intolerant ways of the disciplined Puritan America of 1850, with his novel The Scarlet Letter. This novel has become a classic, because of the accurate port...
One Letter Closer to GodIt is adequate to begin a composition of this caliber with the quote, "It (the scarlet letter) had the effect of a spell, taking her out of the ordinary relations with humanity, and enclosing her in a sphere by herself" (56). This confinement, undoubtedly, keeps Hester close...
Nathaniel Hawthorne used symbolism a great deal in many of hisworks, including Rappachini's Daughter and "The Ministers Black Veil",but most prominently in The Scarlet Letter. There are differencesbetween Hawthorne's symbolism and "conventional" symbolism,Hawthorne flatly stated what his symbols me...
The book The Scarlet Letter is all about symbolism. People and objects are symbolic of events and thoughts. Throughout the course of the book, Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Hester, Pearl, and Arthur Dimmesdale to signify Puritanic and Romantic philosophies. Hester Prynne, through the eyes of the ...
In Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, The Puritans were a strict group of radical Christians that believed that they better than everyone else. Their treatment of their fellow man shows this. They believed in punishment for sinners. This is evident in their treatment of Hester Prynne. They punished...
Nathaniel Hawthorne is one of the most prolific symbolists in American literature. In literature a symbol is most often a concrete object used to represent an idea more abstract and broader in scope and meaning. In the Scarlet Letter Hawthorne has many of these symbols but in order to understand his...
Puritanism was the religion practiced by the people of colonial Boston, the setting for Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. The author, Nathaniel Hawthorne, utilizes imagery to convey that Arthur Dimmesdale, a Puritan minister of the town, does indeed represent the Puritan society and not only the...
The writer, Nathaniel Hawthorne, portrays the Puritan society in his novel, the "The Scarlet Letter". Through out this novel, Hawthorne shows the reader certain aspects of his opinion of the Puritan society. Hawthorne is constantly judging the Puritans and it's standards of morality...
There are some things that could have happened to Hester Prynne in The Scarlet Letter if she had followed the footsteps of Anne Hutchinson. Anne Hutchinson believed differently from most Puritans in the 1640's. She held these beliefs with all her heart. People did not like her for that so they banis...
Hester Prynne and Arthur DimmesdaleIn the novel The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale are two estranged lovers. They have a daughter named Pearl, who was the product of Hester's and Arthur's adultery. When Hester became pregnant, she had absolutely no idea w...
Hester Prynne and Arthur DimmesdaleIn the novel The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale are two estranged lovers. They have a daughter named Pearl, who was the product of Hester's and Arthur's adultery. When Hester became pregnant, she had absolutely no idea w...
Nathaniel Hawthorn's novel "The Scarlet Letter" is the tale of Hester Prynne, an adulteress who is part of a Puritan community in Boston, Massachusetts. When the community hears that Hester is an adulteress, they shun her from society and do not give her a chance to explain herself. As a result...
In his novel, The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne incorporates Puritanism into several themes of his work: Individual vs. Society, The Nature of Evil, and The Heart vs. the Head. The novel is set in the Puritan town of Boston in the 1700s. Hester Prynne, the protagonist, is being persecuted for...
The gloomy portrayal, reflexive of the puritan society in chapter one of the Scarlet Letter, was formed by Nathaniel Hawthorne to not only foreshadow events in the novel, but to also unveil the thematic idea of social rejection and Hawthorne's own spurn of social conformity and idealism. Through th...
Symbolism In early Boston around 1650, life was simple and bland being peculiar for people to judge or be excessive. Irony, however, was portrayed in the accounts from this time period. Nathaniel Hawthornes The Scarlet Letter displays many people, places, and objects, used as symbols: Pearls hid...
Hester Prynne is the person forced to bear the truth of her inappropriate actions in public, symbolized by the scarlet letter she wears on her chest, in The Scarlet Letter. This treatment of Puritan society changes her entire world, and isolates her from everyone, but how exactly does she view herse...
Nathaniel Hawthorne is the author of the Scarlet Letter. This book is about a young puritan named Hester Prynne, who has committed adultery and is on her search for redemption. There are two other characters strongly involved in this book; they are Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale and Roger Chillingworth...
The heroine in the Scarlet Letter is Hester Prynne. Even though Hester sins against God, she is a woman who survives the horrendous trials of a "Puritan" society-the society that wants to be a Utopia among imperfect people. From her horrendous trials, Hester gains strength, courage, and her l...
Puritan men held dark suspicions of all women as daughters of Eve, hungry for both control and sexual indulgence. In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne investigates the nature of sin and criticizes Puritan cruelty and intolerance. Throughout the novel, the scarlet A comes to represent a refusa...
Pearl, a Constant ReminderOne of the most complex and elaborate characters in The Scarlet Letter is Pearl, the daughter of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale. Pearl, throughout the story, has many physical, emotional, and psychological characteristics. Her motivation, reactions to others and thei...
Robert Frost's "Mending Wall" describes a stone barrier that two neighbors visit each year for repair. The wall is used as a metaphor for how we place barriers between each other, which is far easier to deal with, but is a loss in the long run. Buildings and structures have long been used to symb...
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 Great Mistake Of Sins The Bible says, "The consequences of sin is death." Nathaniel Hawthrorne portrays a chain of sequenced events that happen because of sin his characters commit. In the 1600's, Boston, Massachusetts is filled with the religious group the Puritans who were &...
Demonic Child In Hawthorne's novel the Scarlet Letter the character Pearl is the product of sin. Everyone in town thought of pearl as abnormal, unnatural, a demon child, and a symbol of adultery committed by her mother Hester Prynne and Father Dimmsdale (which people did not know of yet). Thi...