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Scarlet Letter, The - Book Review

  • Scarlet Letter
    yet seeks to find scapegoats to cover its own liabilities. Both of these reviews of The Scarlet Letter seek to condemn Dimmesdale for being yellow and not stepping...
  • The Scarlet Letter
    around two major symbols: light and darkness and the scarlet letter. The book is filled with light and darkness symbols because it represents the most common...
  • Scarlet Letter-Symbols
    New England Quarterly 43.2 (June 1970): 209-230 Hawthorne, Nathaniel, The Scarlet Letter. Bantam Books, New York, New York 1850 Levy, Leo B. "The Landscape Modes...
  • Mad Shadows And The Scarlet Letter
    ENG18Y1- James Meade Reference: Blais,Marie-Claire. Mad Shadows. This New Canadian Library:2008 Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Scarlet Letter. Penguin Books:2003...
  • Scarlet Letter :Book Review
    almost replaced by the community as able due to Hesters deeds to the community. Scarlet Letter also uses nature's flowers as a way to symbolize growth in the novel...

Scarlet Letter, The - Book Review

        Adultery, betrayal, promiscuity, subterfuge, and
intrigue, all of which would make an excellent coming
attraction on the Hollywood scene and probably a pretty good
book.   Add Puritan ideals and writing styles, making it
long, drawn out, tedious, wearisome, sleep inducing,
insipidly asinine, and the end result is The Scarlet Letter.
Despite all these things it is considered a classic and was
a statement of the era.
        The Scarlet Letter is a wonderful and not so
traditional example of the good versus evil theme.   What  
makes this a unique instance of good versus evil is that
either side could be considered either one.   Hester could
very easily have been deduced as evil, or the "bad guy," as
she was by the townspeople. That is, she was convicted of
adultery, a horrible sin of the time, but maybe not even
seen as criminal today.   As for punishment, a sentence to
wear a scarlet "A" upon her chest, it would   hardly be
considered a burden or extreme sentence in present day.   Or
Hester can be seen as rebelling against a society where she
was forced into a loveless marriage and hence she would
be the "good guy," or girl, as the case may be.   Also the
townspeople, the magistrates, and Chillingworth, Hester's
true husband, can be seen in both lights.   Either they can
be perceived as just upholding the law -she committed a
crime, they enforce the law.   On the other hand are they
going to extreme measures such as   wanting to take Pearl,
Hester's daughter, away just because Hester has deviated
from the norm, all to enforce an unjust law that does not
even apply to this situation?
        Although the subjects of the novel do apply to
important issues in history and could have had influences on
the time period, they were not great.   During the times and
in the Puritan community this did not have a large affect on
anything.   Sure, they did not want anyone committing
adultery, most were killed if...