Dichotomy In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Young Goodman Brown, an array of characters who are characterized throughout the story as being “two-faced.” By this, I refer to the existence of having a personality contrary to one that most people would assume to be the true self. The main character whose name is also concurrently the title of this work, Young Goodman Brown, is a perfect example of a character with the existence of dichotomy in characterization. Young Goodman Brown is introduced at the beginning of the story as a being of “good,” with even his name being linked to the very word. He is seen as being a version of good by means of connections made with religion, relaying to his wife Faith religiously implied messages, such as referencing to prayers, angels, heaven and so on in the beginning of the work. However, despite this initial impression, through the journey he embarked on to the dark forest, …show more content…

Faith, the traveler, and Satan, are all described as character who are either labeled as “good” or “evil,” with no neutrality or ambivalence. I would categorize Faith in this story as a being of good, with the latter two as beings of evil, through the ways they’re portrayed in the work. Faith remained a being of good with her “faithfulness” to her husband. One may argue that she underwent a change similar to Young Goodman Brown at the communion, but since the writer didn’t write directly that she gave into evil or not, I strongly assume that she resisted and obeyed her husband, this affirmation made especially with how she behaved unchanged when being reunited with her husband again in the end. With the other two characters, they did not show any traces of good in their actions, so I was convinced that they were characters without the kind of two-sidedness that Young Goodman Brown and some others

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