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Symbolism In The Birthmark

Decent Essays

From plastic surgery to botox, people try to morph their physical attributes in pursuit of achieving their idea of perfection, but when is it enough? Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story,“The Birthmark,” tells about a husband consumed by achieving the idea of perfection through his scientific knowledge to dispose of what he believes to be a defect that resides on his nearly-perfect wife’s cheek - a crimson birthmark in the shape of a hand - because he feels that the birthmark is the only thing that prevents her from achieving absolute perfection. After seeing the disgust in her husband’s face at the look of her birthmark and hearing her husband’s constant desire to remove the mark, the wife began to hate her once adored birthmark and longed for …show more content…

The birthmark represents Georgiana’s humanity as well as an indication of her flaws to Hawthorne in that it is human nature to be imperfect and mortal, and this defines what it means to be human. Hawthorne symbolically refers to the birthmark as being “deeply interwoven” with Georgiana’s countenance to show the reader how a person’s flaws are an inseparable part of their character (Hawthorne 614). Hawthorne gives life to Georgiana’s birthmark by showing how its visibility shifts with the changing color of her face such as “when she blushed it gradually became more distinct… but if any shifting motion caused her to turn pale there was the mark again” and also how it “faded from her cheek [along with] the parting breath of the now perfect woman” to symbolize her mortality (Hawthorne 614, 623). As well as showing mortality, Jeffrey Howard refers to the birthmark as being “a vital symbol in ascertaining Aylmer’s motivation to remove his wife’s blemish” that “exists as a reaction to the birthmark which [Aylmer] perceives as a threat to his masculine dominance” because of the mark’s placement on Georgiana’s cheek (Howard

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