The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Professor Brady The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne - Lecture Notes 3/17 Students’ hand in Paper #2 – Feedback -Discussion Writing Prompt: Motivation (5min) – Students are asked to Interpret, Evaluate and Respond to the following quotes. “ Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder” - Anonymous “ Man is not perfect; nothing is perfect” -Anonymous Who is Nathaniel Hawthorne? (1804-64) A well-renowned and prolific writer. He was born in Salem Massachusetts. His is a descendant of Puritan Immigrants. Famous for the novel The Scarlet Letter (1850). Among Hawthorne's most widely anthologized stories are 'Young Goodman Brown' (1835), originally published in the New-England Magazine, 'The Birthmark (1843), published in Pioneer, and 'Rappacini's Daughter' (1844) Hawthorne, similar to that of Edgar Allen Poe possessed a dark view of human nature. 1

Transcript of The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Page 1: The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Professor Brady

The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne - Lecture Notes 3/17

Students’ hand in Paper #2 – Feedback -Discussion

Writing Prompt: Motivation (5min) – Students are asked to Interpret, Evaluate and Respond to the following quotes.

“ Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder” - Anonymous

“ Man is not perfect; nothing is perfect” -Anonymous

Who is Nathaniel Hawthorne? (1804-64) A well-renowned and prolific writer. He was born in

Salem Massachusetts. His is a descendant of Puritan Immigrants.

Famous for the novel The Scarlet Letter (1850). Among Hawthorne's most widely anthologized stories

are 'Young Goodman Brown' (1835), originally published in the New-England Magazine, 'The Birthmark (1843), published in Pioneer, and 'Rappacini's Daughter' (1844)

Hawthorne, similar to that of Edgar Allen Poe possessed a dark view of human nature.

Hawthorne later in life became friends with a group called Transcendentalists. Among this famous group included Ralph Waldo Emerson. The man we quote as our motto- “Nothing Great was ever achieved without enthusiasm” Transcendentalism in simple terms is founded on the premise that the human spirit cannot be free if it is restrained by conformity.

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Professor Brady

The human spirit (mans spirit) cannot only be filled with happiness and peace if it is strongly connected to Nature. Nature is all that God has created. This way of thinking inspired many great thinkers and authors.

Keep in mind this was during the time of the Industrial Revolution – Man Was Obsessed with SCIENCE…. The Transcendentalists were interested in nature and the natural world. At the same time Transcendentalism spun from the belief that creativity and the human spirit needs to be present for humanity to flourish.. hence the American Renaissance.

“Transcendentalism dominated the thinking of the American Renaissance, and its resonances reverberated through American life well into the 20th century. In one way or another our most creative minds were drawn into its thrall, attracted not only to its practicable messages of confident self-identity, spiritual progress and social justice, but also by its aesthetics, which celebrated, in landscape and mindscape, the immense grandeur of the American soul” (pbs.org).

* Hawthorne used fiction as a means of “exploring the moral dimensions of sin and the human soul.”

The Time Period – Before Transcendentalism there was Romanticism!

Elements of the Romantic Period – Note to self/class- (people were agitated, they moved away from the agricultural age and into an industrial society that was large, impoverished and encompassed a restless working class).

Emphasis on imagination and emotion, individual passion and inspiration

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Professor Brady

Rejection of formal, upper class works and a preference for writing (poetry) that addresses personal experiences and emotions in simple, language.

A turn to the past or an inner dream world that is thought to be more picturesque and magical than the current world (industrial age)

Fascination with nature; perception of nature as transformative

A good example is Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Favored democracy Desired radical change- journey away from corruption

of civilization and limits of rational thought toward the integrity of nature and freedom of the imagination

Nature should be untamed ( Do NOT Tamper with NATURE) NATURE was viewed as a RESTORATIVE Power – TRANFORMATIVE

“The Birthmark “

Plot – The story is about a young scientist who marries a beautiful young woman with a god given birthmark. Before he marries her he is acceptant of the birthmark. However, as the story progresses, he becomes more and more tortured by her birthmark. He feels this birthmark leaves her less than perfect. Repulsed by her birthmark , the protagonist makes his wife feel abhorrent and rejected.

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Professor Brady

Setting – Late 1700’s

Allegory by definition: Objects, people and actions are a representation or connect to a larger meaning outside the narrative. The larger meaning has social, political or religious meaning. Characters usually personify these larger ideas (i.e.; Lord of the Flies) Aylmer and Georgiana represent ideas far greater than what is communicated in the story.

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