Literary Criticism In The Scarlet Letter, By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Talia Davis Ms. Macpherson Honors English III February 24, 2014

Nathaniel Hawthorne was born on July 4, 1804 in Salem, Massachusetts. When Hawthorne was four years of age his father died of yellow fever. From 1821 to 1824 he studied at Bowdoin College in Maine. After attending Bowdoin College, Hawthorne worked as a writer and contributor to periodicals. Throughout the novel “The Scarlet Letter” shows biographical criticism.
Hawthorne envisioned a path on who he wanted to be as an author. Puritan New England was the setting for his writing path. Hawthorne wrote fiction that deals with philosophy and human emotion and philosophy it was part of the romantic literary tradition. The romantic literary tradition included themes such as heresy, witchcraft and adultery which were all used in his works. Hawthorne claimed that his work explored the depths of our common nature. Nathaniel Hawthorne's fiction is unique in two important respects. He was the first major novelist to combine high moral seriousness with transcendent dedication to art. Also he was also the first major novelist to insist upon the basic unreality of his works. An imaginative genius gifted with considerable linguistic skill, he opened a path in literature that few have followed with comparable success. Like all great writers h...

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...aradoxical. Dimmesdale struggles with the knowledge of his sin, and inability to disclose from the Puritan society and his desire for confession. He attempts to ameliorate the pressure of this position by punishing himself mentally and physically, and by insisting to his parishioners that he is a base, worthless creature.
While Hawthorne was becoming a well-known author he hit some difficult stages along the way of his writing career. Hawthorne was living in Concord, Massachusetts at the time of his struggle. Hawthorne referred to himself with no confidence in his literary capacity as a means of livelihood. He found himself unable to write a third of the time. Hawthorne had a difficult time composing ideas to write about and he was moving to slow based off his own standards. Hawthorne referred more than once to the hatred of the pen which belongs to a tired writer.

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