Crime And Punishment In Gothic Literature

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CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN GOTHIC LITERATURE
Gothic literature is a genre of writing that combines fiction, romance, horror, and death into one big mass of complicated, supernatural circumstances. In the middle of the nineteenth-century in the developing United States, this was one of the most common forms of entertainment for educated people. Writers like Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne, who brought about new ideas and writing techniques never before encountered in any story, set the stage for what became known as American literature. Characters in these stories were often dark, creepy, or outright bizarre. One theme that prevailed throughout all of these types of stories was that people got the punishments they deserved for their crimes; …show more content…

Aylmer, the main character in Hawthorne’s “The Birthmark”, is a prime example of a different flaw of hubristic characters; they do not appreciate what they have until it is gone. Aylmer, a late eighteenth-century scientist who is completely devoted to his work, finds a beautiful girl to marry once he puts down his work. Shortly after marriage, he realizes how much the small hand-shaped birthmark on Georgiana’s face upsets him, and he tells her. Instead of appreciating that he is happily married, Aylmer goes out of his way to find flaws in his wife and try to fix the one thing in nature that cannot be tampered with: human imperfection. Hawthorne …show more content…

In Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”, Brown finds out that everyone he knows is a devil worshipper, and even those who pretend to be good are secretly evil. At first, he embarks on a journey through the woods, trying to remain a good Christian and not be tempted by the devil. As he sees more and more evil, he keeps his wife Faith in the back of his mind; she keeps him going until he reaches the evil ceremony in the woods, and thus his innocence is broken. The next morning, he does not remember if his whole experience was real or a dream; however, deep down, he trusts no one anymore. Hawthorne does not make it clear, but it can be implied that Young Goodman Brown ventured into the forest in order to find out more about the devil. Gothic horror gives him a taste of his own medicine, because one of the golden rules in this genre of literature is that the less you know, the happier you will be. Young Goodman Brown realizes at some point that the whole world is wicked, and nothing is ever the same for him. His ordinary life has been turned upside

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