Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The Scarlet Letter tells a realistic story centered around a woman named Hester Prynne. Oh her husband’s trip over her husband was supposedly killed, which was not the case. The Puritan town she moved into disliked the new relationship she formed with the town's minister, starting her as a sinner. As the story progresses Hester finds her lasting punishment less and less meaningful and casts it aside. After her death, along with the other main characters, Hester’s life becomes a story for the new generations making her just an object to be learned from. Roger Chillingworth, Hester’s husband from europe, was supposedly lost at sea. Thinking that to be true hester found a new lover: Arthur Dimmesdale. Thier
The author of “The Scarlet Letter,” Nathaniel Hawthorne, utilizes a variety of rhetorical devices to reveal to the audience that he viewed Hester Prynne as a strong, beautiful woman who was confident in herself. Although Hawthorne believed Hester deserved a punishment, he thought that her crime shouldn’t get in the way of her being ashamed to continue living her life. The author shows Hester’s remarkable character by describing her inner strength, her honesty, her compassion, and her defiance. It is known through the novel that the author holds women in high esteem and they should be respected. Hawthorne communicated his attitude toward Hester Prynne by explaining her physical appearance, showing dialogue between other characters, and using
Hawthorne's Hester Prynne is the underdog protagonist that the reader cannot help but want to succeed. She is flawed but her flaws are outshone by her good heart and spirit. This shamed and humiliated woman is the one the reader, with the help of Hawthorne’s descriptions, wants to support. This sinful woman, with a child from wedlock, a diabolical “husband”, and a secretive lover is the motivating force that drives the reader to continue on with The Scarlet Letter. The language, descriptions, and plot of The Scarlet Letter show that Hawthorne believes the reader should look past gender stereotypes because not everything is what is
People have been stereotyping outcasts since the beginning of time. This behavior is a crucial component of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel, The Scarlet Letter. The main character of the story, Hester Prynne, resides in a community of Puritans; who are notorious hypocrites. Their harsh rules are basically impossible to follow, therefore setting their citizens up for failure and punishment. Hawthorne tells the story of Hester Prynne with the elements of sin, judgement, and revenge.
With all the chaos present in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, there is a central point at which the novel revolves around: Hester Prynne’s sin. Because of her adulterous actions, she is mocked by both modern and Puritan society. It is through her character as an adulteress that D.H. Lawrence scorns and evaluates Hester Prynne’s flaws through his use of brief diction, sarcastic tone, and biblical allusions.
The Scarlet Letter is a novel that took place in the 17th century, written by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The heartbreaking story of the main character, Hester Prynne dispersed the reader's’ thoughts. Hester Prynne suffered from adultery, where she had a child without father’s presence and support. Hester also suffered from bullying, where she was conjectured by superior people in the Puritan Legacy. The Scarlet Letter illustrated many bullying examples throughout certain chapters of the book.
A woman, Hester Prynne, who does not ignore her mistake, and Arthur Dimmesdale who does. Nathaniel Hawthorne wants the reader to learn that running away from your problems always has repercussions, and often leads to others. At the beginning of the story Hester Prynne gets punished for her sin, adultery. The punishment is to stand for three hours on the scaffold and wear the Scarlet Letter for the rest of her life.
Hester Prynne was shunned and labeled by society due to the fact she had an illegitimate child while her husband was allegedly lost at sea. She endures seven years of punishment and suffers through extreme physical change because of it. Her punishment was to wear a red scarlet letter on her chest to publically humiliate her and inform everyone of her “Adultery”, people began to accept her as she was, even in her lesser form, and the meaning of the letter began to change to a more positive symbol. By the end of the novel Hester regained her beauty after removing the scarlet letter once and for all. The physical, mental, and spiritual development of Hester Prynne in the novel
Nathaniel Hawthorne portrays the ideology of Puritan society in the novel the Scarlet Letter; however reader also get to witness his characters being an illustration of hypocrisy and victims to their own guilt. In the Scarlet Letter, as in many of Hawthorne’s shorter works, he makes profuse use of the Puritan past: its odd exclusionary belief, its harsh code of ruling, its concern with sex and witchcraft. The Scarlet Letter is a story that is embellished but yet simple. Many readers may view this novel as a soap opera due to the way Hawthorne conveys this Puritan society’s sense of strictness and inability to express true emotion along with the secrecy and how deceiving the characters are being. As the story unfolds the main character Hester Prynne is bounded in marriage at an early age. She engages in an adulterous affair with an unknown member of their small village. Hester soon becomes pregnant and with her husband’s absence the chances of this child belonging to her husband are slim. The towns’ people know that she has committed a sin and imprisons her for her crime.
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is a book written about the punishment of bearing the cost of Adultery. This features the leading character, Hester Prynne, letting the reader see her as a symbol of courage and how the effect of a single letter can have on one’s life. Hester Prynne and her lover have too many problems in the result of the letter, with one, of course, being the vengeful pursuit of her husband, Roger Chillingworth. Hester’s betrayal sparks Chillingworth’s nature as the antagonists in the story, with his desire for revenge and his self-inflicted moral deterioration. His keen attributes, combined with his madness, results in the novel's main idea of the consequences of sin.
Hester Prynne is a strong woman. In The scarlet letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, how a beautiful widow name Hester Prynne who came from New Amsterdam to Boston in 1640, and settle in the puritan society. The puritan society which is strict on religious and cultural rules, one of the sins is adultery. Hester have committed adultery, with the minster and had a child, who she named pearl. She was punished by the high official of puritan society for committing adultery and to place a letter a on her chest for rest of her life.
Anne Hutchinson, a Puritan settler, gets exiled from the Puritan Settlement because of her actions. Similarly, Hester Prynne’s sinful action results in her confinement in prison, away from the town people. In the 1850’s, Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes The Scarlet Letter. Set in a Puritanical Society, The Scarlet Letter tells the story of how one simple act of passion upsets the very basic thread of society. In the novel, Hester Prynne personally transcends the judgments of society through her discoveries in nature, while she lives a simplistic life and becomes more self-reliant.
In his classic literature piece, The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne shows readers how sin can affect people and their lives significantly. In the Puritan town of Boston, Hawthorne uses his characters to convey the theme of sin within the story. To punish wrongdoers and discourage further sinning, the Puritan community publicly shames offenders for their sins, often changing their roles within society significantly. The Scarlet Letter is based around the public humiliation and growth of the character Hester Prynne. Hawthorne represents how sin can change people using Hester Prynne as an example, whose identity within society, physical appearance, and mentality all change as a result of her sin.
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne is a novel that takes place during the sixteen hundreds in a Puritan Boston town and incorporates love, judgment and sin. Sin is one of many things that is frowned upon in many religions. In the Scarlet Letter, Hester is in a predicament she can not escape. Hester has committed the sin of adultery and is bearing a child. Hester is put to shame by society and now she is viewed as a sinful individual.
The historical fiction novel The Scarlet Letter, written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, explores the themes of sin, guilt, and punishment. The protagonist, Hester Prynne, commits adultery, and faces the backlash from her Puritan community throughout the novel. Also enduring this hardship is Pearl, the daughter of Hester and the child of the illicit affair. The community despises Pearl, and sees her as the embodiment of evil itself. Although public shaming can cause one to be self-assured, The Scarlet Letter shows how constant punishment for another’s crime can have negative effects. For example, the stigma around Pearl prevents her from making any friends, which leads to her distrust of humans. Also, Pearl’s reputation pulls her out of her childhood, forcing her to mature faster. Furthermore, Pearl’s misplaced mistreatment changes the way she views herself.
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 uses Hester Prynne to symbolize that those who challenge social conformities can benefit society as a whole. Though she has been banished for committing adultery, she sees that the community needs her. Through her generous accomplishments the community realizes she is a person who, regardless of her sin, can affect the community in a positive way.