Critical Analysis of Chapter 13, Scarlet Letter

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Midway through The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne gives the reader an in-depth look at the change in Hester Prynne's character. The chapter title: "Another View of Hester" sets the stage for the discussion of the change in Hester's personality, character, and intellect as well as a summary of her past four years. This "other view" refers both to the changing perception of the Puritan community toward Hester as well as the narrator's detailed description of the changes in her. There are several key changes in this chapter, which can be considered.

Firstly, identity emerges as an important premise in this section of the novel. The ways in which a society tries to define a person are often at odds with the way that individual defines them self. As the community reinterprets the scarlet letter, Hester once again has an identity thrust upon her by her fellow townspeople, but in the end, it's just a letter.

The town's reevaluation of Hester is significant because of what it says about Hester herself, about the changes she has undergone while earning this new classification. The people in her community believe that Hester's charitable behavior is the result of their punitive system working effectively. Hester spends most of her days tending to the sick and feeding the poor and waits for no acknowledgement from those she has rendered services. When confronted by people, she bows her head and places her finger upon the Scarlet Letter. This shift in Hester's nature leads to the re-classification of the letter, so much that it comes to mean "Able" instead of "Adulterer" and leads the townspeople to think that the punishment has successfully humbled her, when in fact, "the scarlet letter had not done its office" (Hawthorne,...

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...omised not to reveal who he really is, and realizes that it was the wrong decision. Hester decides to confront him and inform him that she will no longer keep his identity a secret. This is a dramatic a shift in her personality, because in the beginning, she was terrified of what he might do to her. Now, having seen that her inaction has in fact led to Dimmesdale's demise in health, she realizes that she must act quickly. We see that in spite of Hester's tendency to think philosophically, she really is an emotional woman and represents the power of love as opposed to the stern Puritan logic.

Chapter 13 emphasizes that through her grace and charity, Hester's position in the eyes of the Puritan community has changed. She has borne her shame and sorrow with great dignity. She has evolved from a timid young girl into a woman possessing compassion and strength.

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