As regular followers of this blog recall, I participate in an online book club, hosted by my friend Carrie at readingtoknow. This is my third time through The Scarlet Letter. The first occurred at somewhere around age ten or eleven, when my mother read it to my siblings and me.
As regular followers of this blog recall, I participate in an online book club, hosted by my friend Carrie at readingtoknow. This is my third time through The Scarlet Letter. The first occurred at somewhere around age ten or eleven, when my mother read it to my siblings and me.
Since I am the oldest, my brother and sister would have been even younger. I got my love of literature from my mother, who was an avid reader from a young age. I remember reading Laura Ingalls Wilder and C. Lewis together as some of my earliest memories.
We read David Copperfield when I was all of nine - my sister would have been five. This was serious stuff, and I believe it taught me critical thinking skills early. I had to grapple with opposing ideas and the real life consequences of those ideas.
I still look back on those days fondly, and I know that my horizons were broadened as a result. I re-visited The Scarlet Letter in high school. It was assigned as our full-length novel in American Literature.
I took a set of video courses in high school since neither of my parents was confident teaching algebra. While the English teacher for grades ten and twelve was excellent Mr.
Collins, I wish every teacher was like you! This reading, at more than twice the age of the last, added a few extra layers that I had not noticed before.
I will discuss the life of Anne Hutchinson in detail in a note below. And nobody really wanted to emulate them, right? In addition, in the course of reading this book, I have spend some additional time looking into what the Puritans believed, and how they responded to the events and ideas of their time.
Although Hawthorne was a contemporary of Charles Dickens, his writing is best understood as being of the earlier Romantic Era, and thus more of a kin to the dark works of the Bronte sisters, or the epics of Sir Walter Scott, than the more realistic works of the Victorians.
Thus, it is a mistake to approach The Scarlet Letter as a realistic work. The events are clearly too coincidental to be taken literally, and the characters are exaggerated. Hawthorne himself commented that The Scarlet Letter might succeed as an opera.
And certainly, such an opera should have been composed by Verdi.Young women glance at the scarlet letter and then haughtily glance away. Not fun. Hester is bummed about all this, but she also can't help wondering whether many more people shouldn't have scarlet letters attached to their clothes.
From the Diary of Chillingworth; From the Diary of Chillingworth. January 7, By arielc GOLD, Montvale, New Jersey. I'm reading The Scarlet Letter in . However, in The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne exemplifies the ethics, independence, and beauty that defy typical feminine standards in the 17th century.
Thus, Hester becomes a feminist champion in the novel through her exceptional characteristics and her support for Arthur Dimmesdale. Scarlet Letter Diary. Symbolism in The Scarlet Letter “He that falls into sin is a man; that grieves at it, is a saint; that boasteth of it, is a devil” (Thomas Fuller).
In modern times, society doesn’t sentence a man to jail time for committing the crime of adultery. We have grown to accept adultery more in our society today than people did in the 17th century. Feb 28, · The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne Source of book: I own this. As regular followers of this blog recall, I participate in an online book club, hosted by my friend Carrie at initiativeblog.com Symbolism of The Scarlet Letter “A” “On a field, sable, the letter A, gules” (Hawthorne ).
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne is a story of a woman named Hester Prynne who overcomes the pestering punishment of wearing the scarlet “A”.