Confirmation Letter Essay

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    All people have their own views of what it means to be an American. One’s vision typically revolves around the values of society and the situation that the people are placed in. Suffering leads to a dream of success, while suppression leads to a dream of change and independence. Pieces of literature from American history show that Americans are willing to overcome adversity when faced with it, using idiosyncrasies between themselves and their environment to grow and make themselves stronger.…

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    Composers raise social and political issues that reflect the context in which they are exposed, in order to critique and analyse the values and prejudice of their time towards the outsider. The Victorian text ‘Scarlet Letter’ by Nathaniel Hawthorn revolves around the Puritan religion in relation to the outsider. It explores the dangers of a society that make religion and politics the sole basis of its law and order. Similarly, Todd Haynes 2002 film ‘Far from Heaven’ reflects issues of…

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    which he uses specific diction with the passionate, connotative style in a more informal tone in order to draw attention to the theme of logic versus emotion and to highlight the thoughts and feelings of the main characters affected by the Scarlet Letter. The two main tone shifts are apparent, but subtler shifts into neutral and colloquial tones are included, allowing Hawthorne to capture the shifting thoughts and moods of the main characters as the story progresses. The author allows imagery…

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    The past of America is portrayed in both The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol F. Karlsen and The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, giving us a better perspective into our past. Puritan New England sets the stage for the two novels because the society is what shapes the characters and the events of both novels. Both novels show relations with Puritan society, sin, and women 's sexuality. However, the portrayal of the different sides of Puritan America and the focus of the novels are…

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    The Scarlet Letter tells the tale of a woman named Hester Prynne, who has an illegitimate child, Pearl, with one of Boston’s well-known ministers, Arthur Dimmesdale. Set in Puritan New England in the 1700s, the environment encircles the Puritan beliefs as well as the Puritan government. Caught by the town when her pregnancy starts to show, Hester is sentenced to prison time and public humiliation for her adultery. As she raises Pearl she encounters her eccentric behavior and wild actions in…

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    The justification behind the concept of punishment takes many different forms. In Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, the primary rationale behind the Puritans’ punishment of Hester Prynne, the accused adulteress, is retributive, in proportional to the nature of the transgression. The Puritans intend their punishment of ostracism and forced visibility of the letter “A” to match Hester’s crime of adultery by shaming her with a sense of damnation. However, ironically this punishment brings an…

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    is to be perceived is distorted. In Hawthorne’s novel, The Scarlet Letter, a woman named Hester Prynne commits adultery with a minister named Arthur Dimmesdale and only she is publicly scrutinized. Although this seems advantageous for Dimmesdale at first, this held in guilt destroys him and is reminded of his sin whenever he sees Hester with the scarlet ‘A”. The fallacies of human morality become the centerpiece of The Scarlet Letter and showcase the battle between one 's true feelings and the…

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    hypocrisy , it is still something that tells a lot about that person. In The Scarlet Letter, Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale allows his weakness to society to overpower his ability to avoid falling into the abyss of hypocrisy when he is faced with the predicament of dealing with his sin of committing adultery alongside Hester Prynne. Dimmesdale embodies the concept of hypocrisy on many occasions throughout The Scarlet Letter, representing how Puritan ideals as a whole were…

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    Nonconformity in The Scarlet Letter In the Romantic period, philosophers, artists, and authors emphasized the idea of individualism. They thought that it was better for a person to be unique as opposed to being a conformist to society. Romanticists also encouraged the support of new ideas as opposed to traditional ideas. The author of The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne, was a Romantic author, and he used these Romantic ideals in his works. In The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne uses Hester and…

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    Each and every character throughout Nathaniel Hawthorne’s, The Scarlet Letter, progressed in their own, unique way; although, Pearl developed the most in delightful and corrupt manners. During this entire novel, Hawthorne presents both good and evil, which certainly varies within the characters over time. This is explained in Hugo McPherson’s analysis of The Scarlet Letter: Hawthorne’s rejection of the Calvinist view of human nature, however, does not lead him to espouse the cause of man’s…

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