Nathaniel Hawthorne. Persecution within puritan community Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century...

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Nathaniel Hawthorne

Transcript of Nathaniel Hawthorne. Persecution within puritan community Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century...

Page 1: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Page 2: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

Persecution within puritan community Witchcraft trials in the 17th century were a

deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon within the Puritan community.

In 1542, the English Parliament made witchcraft a capital offense.

Page 3: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

A witch was supposed to be someone who performed evil deeds in the service of Satan. Witches were often identified by strange marks on their bodies. They were believed to have “familiars” or animals that would do evil for them. The biggest witchcraft hunting took place in Salem in 1692.

Page 4: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

About the author

Hawthorne took residence for a few years in Concord, with Emerson and Thoreau as his neighbors, but he was really a native of Salem, Massa.

Page 5: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

His works The Scarlet Letter (1850) The House of Seven Gables (1851) The Blithedale Romance (1852) The Marble Faun (1860)

Page 6: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

What are the symbolic meanings of the scarlet letter A in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter?

Hester as an “Adulterer”. The letter A comes to stand for “Able” or “Admirable”. “A” is also a symbol of the words “Alone” or “Alienation”.

Page 7: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

For Dimmesdale, The scarlet letter “A” also can be seen the symbol of “Adam” —an archetypal vice suggestive of original sin.

Arthur Ambition

Page 8: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

The letter A to Chillingworth means “Avenging” and signifying his physical appearance “Aged”.

Page 9: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

As to Pearl, Hester’s illegitimate daughter, the letter A suggests that she is baby sent by God, “an Angel”.

Page 10: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

Three sinners 1). Hester Prynne—repentant sinner—visible scarl

et letter 2). Dimmesdale—hidden sinner—invisible scarlet l

etter 3). Chillingworth—unpardonable sinner—the make

r of scarlet letter 4). Pearl—a living version of the scarlet letter

Page 11: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

Hawthorne’s style 1). The use of symbols 2). Revelation of characters’ psychology

like interior monologue to reveal their mind: he probes into the human mind. His character tend to have complex psychologies

Page 12: Nathaniel Hawthorne.  Persecution within puritan community  Witchcraft trials in the 17 th century were a deeply troubling yet significant phenomenon.

3) The use of supernatural mixed with the actual

4). His stories are parable/allegorical—to teach a lesson

5). Use of ambiguity to keep the reader in the world of uncertainty—multiple point of view