One Way or Another: Hawthorne's Use of Females and His Dislike of Puritanism

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Nathaniel Hawthorne- born Hathorne-changed his last name due to his desire to disconnect himself from the Salem Witch Trials and the whole Puritan belief system; seeing as one of his relatives was a judge during this time. Hawthorne, throughout a number of his work, uses his female characters as the stage to show off his feelings towards the Puritanical ideology. He uses the character shells of either an older woman who critically lives by Puritan law, to show how judgmental Puritanism is with anything that doesn’t conform to their beliefs; or has a young pretty “rebel” who goes against Puritan law, which results in showing the corrupt side of Puritanism; using these two character shells in The Scarlet Letter and “The Minister’s Black Veil” Conversely, to blatantly show his hatred towards Puritanism, Hawthorne uses Mistress Hibbins in The Scarlet Letter to combat these two roles, and to continue to show off his dislike towards the religion.

Hawthorne makes the first role for his female characters- the older, stricter Puritan- the most obvious, one note characters in these two pieces. In The Scarlet Letter these women weren’t names nor really big people involved in the story, he used them to show how the community felt about Hester and her “whorish” ways, saying “At the very least, they should have put the brand of a hot iron on Hester Prynne’s forehead.” (Hawthorne, 49) Other comments made by the women of the community include, “What think ye, gossips? If the hussy stood up for judgment before us five, that are not here in a knot together, would she come off with such a sentence as the worship magistrates have awarded? Marry, I trow not!” (Hawthorne, 49) Here, Hawthorne seems to use the stereotype of women to be gossips to cushio...

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...y natural law, and condones man- -made, Puritan Law, and it becomes very clear that Hawthorne was very direct in this approach to bash Puritanism.
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s hatred towards Puritanism is both obvious in him changing his name and in his work, prime examples being The Scarlet Letter and "The Minister's Black Veil". In these two stories his use of older Puritan women of the community and young pretty adulterers greatly reflects his beliefs, being that Puritans themselves are obscenely critical and judgmental of anyone or anything that doesn’t fall under Puritan law and that Puritanism, under the surface, is very corrupt. Of course in The Scarlet Letter Hawthorne throws away these two character niches and introduces Mistress Hibbins, an older witch. This character was designed to blatantly criticize the Puritan religion, without having to use hidden meaning.

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