The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby
Hawthorne and Fitzgerald, two great American romantics, display new attitudes towards nature, humanity, and society within their novels. The novels The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby are very similar with their adjacent themes, motifs, and symbols. The comparison between these two literary pieces show the transition from adultery to ability, societal standards during the chosen time periods, and good vs. evil.
Hawthorne uses the scarlet letter “A” that Hester Prynne was required to wear as an inanimate symbol of her adultery. She had to bear the sin with her as long as she rested in that town. Pearl, Hester’s daughter from the affair, was the living, breathing symbol of her past sin. As many years
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passed, Hester began to wear the letter with pride and changed the meaning in her mind to ability. This was significant because it demonstrated her capability to overcome the stares and judgements from her fellow townspeople and to learn to be proud of her daughter, a gift from god. The adultery in The Scarlet Letter relates to The Great Gatsby in many ways. The characters Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby from the novel The Great Gatsby commit adultery along with Hester Prynne and Reverend Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter. “‘Mother,’ said Pearl, ‘was that the same minister that kissed me by the brook?’ ‘Hold thy peace, dear little Pearl!’ whispered her mother ‘We must not talk in the market-place of what happens to us in the forest’”(Hawthorne, 134). This direct quote from Hawthorne’s piece, The Scarlet Letter, was just one of the countless examples where he shows the symbolism of adultery. The betrayal of Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby demonstrates how most characters were self involved and did not care about societal standards in their town of Long Island. The Puritans were very strict with their rules during the 1630s and that was what Hester Prynne contested against with her bewitching child, Pearl.
Adultery was a terrible crime to them so Hester was to be publicly shamed for the rest of her life. They wanted to make a Utopian Society, perfect society, but this was to be impossible with all their punishment tactics. If they had what they wished for there would have been no scaffold, prison, or public shaming because there would have been no crime. The expectations of the town were appalling and Hawthorne truly wanted to expose the ugliness of Puritan societies. Women were also discriminated against in the novel The Great Gatsby.
“I hope she’ll be a fool-that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool”(Fitzgerald, ch.1). Women were discriminated against in The Great Gatsby and were treated as if they were only suppose to be men’s trophies that were there to be shown off. Society also treated the people with more money better than the people who were poor and lived in poverty. Only wealthy people could go the large parties similar to the ones that Jay Gatsby held in his mansion. Good vs. evil also plays a big role in the comparison between Hawthorne and Fitzgerald’s
novels. Both parties in The Scarlet Letter could be described as the “bad guy” or evil because they both participated in the sin. For example, Reverend Dimmesdale kept his identity of being Pearl’s father a secret and he made Hester endure her sin alone and publicly. Then, he starts feeling the guilt of his sin and attempted to suffer in silence. He had his very own “scarlet letter” on his bare chest, which was revealed at the end of the novel before he passed away. Hester would be counted as the good in this comparison because she went public with her sin. She experienced prison, public shaming, and having to take care of baby Pearl unassisted while Dimmesdale went on with his life innocent, as everyone thought he was. Both Daisy and Tom Buchanan were considered evil because they both committed adultery with someone else and ended up killing the other’s lover. Daisy was reintroduced to Jay Gatsby, the former love of her life, and they hit it off right away. At this time she was already in a loving marriage with Tom. While this had recently occurred, Tom’s sin had been going on for awhile. He had an ongoing affair with Myrtle Wilson, George Wilson’s late wife. She was brutally murdered by Daisy in a car accident after the realization that both sides were cheating on eachother. Also, Tom shot Jay Gatsby dead in his pool for the intimacy between him and his wife. The original married couple ended up together after both their lover’s passing. The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby compare in many ways with themes and symbols. Also, both authors, Nathaniel Hawthorne and F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrayed their similarities well. The comparison between these two literary pieces show the transition from adultery to ability, societal standards during the chosen time periods, and good vs. evil.
Through the rhetorical device characterization, Hawthorne is able to promote his motive of exposing the audience to the life lesson: People grow stronger by recognizing their own weakness. Hester Prynne, the female protagonist in the Scarlet Letter charged with adultery, is forced to wear the embroidered letter “A” on her chest to symbolize the stigma of her sin. In the beginning of the novel,
Hawthorne uses the scarlet letter “A” that Hester Prynne was required to wear as an inanimate symbol of her adultery. She had to bear the sin with her as long as she rested in that town. Pearl, Hester’s daughter from the affair, was the living, breathing symbol of her past sin. As many years passed, Hester began to wear the letter with pride and changed the meaning in her mind to ability. This was significant because it demonstrated her capability to overcome the stares and judgements from her fellow townspeople and to learn to be proud of her daughter, a gift from god. The adultery in The Scarlet Letter relates to The Great Gatsby in many ways.
Six Works Cited In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, the meaning of the letter "A" changes throughout the novel. This change is significant as it indicates the personal growth of the characters as well as the enlightenment of the townspeople. When the novel begins, the letter "A" is a symbol of sin. As the story progresses the “A” slowly transforms to a symbol of Hester’s strength and ability. By the end of the novel, the letter “A” has undergone a complete metamorphisis and represents the respect that Hester has for herself.
Same Goal, Different Route in The Great Gatsby A more thorough investigation of The Great Gatsby is necessary to uncover a well-disguised theme by Fitzgerald in this work. Upon a simple read through one would probably not notice the great similarities of Jay Gatsby and Myrtle Wilson, but the two characters seemed to have the same agenda for their lives. While Gatsby took the route of acquiring money at all costs to join the upper class of society and to be acceptable in the eyes of a woman, Myrtle chose to make her way up in society at the cost of her marriage by attaching herself to money. The underlying question is who had the most success. As a young man, Jay Gatsby was poor with nothing but his love for Daisy. He had attempted to
Readers generally characterize the Puritan Townspeople in The Scarlet Letter by their attitudes in the beginning of the novel. When Hester first walks into the scene, most of the townspeople are very harsh and strict in their religions. They believe that adultery is one of the worst sins possible. One unyielding woman says, “This woman has brought shame upon us all, and ought to die. Is there not law for it? Truly, there is, both in the Scripture and in the statutebook. Then let the magistrates, who have made it of no effect, thank themselves if their own wives and daughters go astray.'; Although a young woman and a righteous man try to intervene with the angry old women, their voices are never heard. Also, Hawthorne associates ugliness with wickedness; therefore, all of the stingy women are described as being very ugly. They regard her not as a fellow sinner but as a woman so evil that she must be ostracized from her “perfect'; community. They view the scarlet letter that she wears upon her breast as a symbol of her atrocious crime of adultery and nothing more. The women in the beginning of the novel are so quick to pass judgment on others, yet they fail to recognize the sin in themselves. Once they realize this obstacle, the townspeople will become more understanding of Hester’s situation.
Most of his family were either businessmen, judges, or seamen. At a very young age his father died and was forced to take care of his mother and two sisters. Hawthorne had a very happy childhood, but when he came back from Bowdoin College he began thinking in a more negative light. He first began thinking that he never really did have a fun and happy childhood, but rather an isolated and solitude lifestyle. Hawthorne claims he constantly spent his time in a haunted room as a young child. When he got older Hawthorne got a leg injury and was unable to walk for a long period of time, giving him much time to think and write. Hawthorne knew he wanted to be a writer but when he found his wife Sophia Peabody he knew he would not be able to support Sophia and himself on his salary of writing books, so he decided to go and work in the Boston Custom House. Where the Custom House was talked about in “The Scarlet Letter”. Most of Hawthorne’s books always had a moral message and often dealt with sin and what was wrong with humanity. In “The Scarlet Letter” he used Hester Prynne as the main sinner and all the other characters who soon followed into her footsteps of sinning. The “A” was just a symbol of the sin but not the sin itself. The sin itself could not be caused from the “A” but from the person who wore the “A”. Hawthorne used the “A” as a constant reminder that no matter how much you try and hide your sin it
Characters in books can reveal the author feeling toward the world. In The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald suggested the moral decline of the period in America history through the interpersonal relationships among his characters. The book indicates the worthlessness of materialism, the futile quest of Myrtle and Gatsby, and how America's moral values had diminished. Despite his newly acquired fortune, Gatsby's monitory means could not afford his only true wish, therefore he cannot buy everything which is important to Daisy. (Fitzgerald, -page 42) What you wish for is not always what you want or not all that glitters is gold.
Nathaniel Hawthorne"s, The Scarlet Letter is a book about a woman, Hester, who moves to Boston from England during the Puritan times. She has a husband, and tells the colonists of Boston he will be arriving to be with her soon. After years go by and he doesn"t arrive, Hester finds another man whom she becomes close to. She becomes pregnant and the town finds out she has committed adultery. She is forced to wear a letter "A," meaning "adulteress," on her bosom for the rest of her life. The book focuses mainly on the sin that was committed because it effected the whole community. The scarlet letter had one basic meaning, "adultery," but to the characters of Hester and Dimmesdale it was a constant reminder of the sin; and to Pearl it was a symbol of curiosity.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is an absurd story, whether considered as romance, melodrama, or plain record of New York high life. The occasional insights into character stand out as very green oases on an arid desert of waste paper. Throughout the first half of the book the author shadows his leading character in mystery, but when in the latter part he unfolds his life story it is difficult to find the brains, the cleverness, and the glamour that one might expect of a main character.
In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, symbolsim is constantly present in the actual scarlet letter “A” as it is viewed as a symbol of sin and the gradally changes its meanign, guilt is also a mejore symbol, and Pearl’s role in this novel is symbolic as well. The Scarlet Letter includes many profound and crucial symbols. these devices of symbolism are best portayed in the novel, most noticably through the letter “A” best exemplifies the changes in the symbolic meaning throughout the novel.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel, The Scarlet Letter, focuses on the Puritan society. The Puritan society molded itself and created a government based upon the Bible and implemented it with force. The crime of adultery committed by Hester generated rage, and was qualified for serious punishment according to Puritan beliefs. Ultimately the town of Boston became intensely involved with Hester's life and her crime of adultery, and saw to it that she be publicly punished and tortured. Based upon the religious, governmental, and social design of the Puritan society, Hester's entire existence revolved around her sin and the Puritan perception. Therefore it is evident within The Scarlet Letter that the Puritan community to some degree has constructed Hester's character.
Hawthorne was a talented and skilled writer, who was greatly influenced by the the community in which he lived. Instead of giving in to society dashing his hopes of becoming a successful writer, he wrote about Hester to express himself and explain his conflicts with the crooked, oppressive society and beliefs of the time. He discusses the problems in a way that every reader can relate to and sympathize with the characters. He skillfully transforms a symbol of shame and sin into a symbol of maternity and nurturance. The Scarlet Letter is truly a symbol of believing in people's capabilities. It is a symbol of resistance to society if all it causes people to do is reject their identities and who they really are.
In a normal Puritan society, a woman’s most important role was that of being a mother and housewife, and women were always seen as being less than a man. The rights of women during Puritan times were very limited and they had many restrictions on what they could and could not do. For example, they could not vote in the town council, own or buy land, or command any servants that their husband or father owned (study.com). Hawthorne represented this through the societies thoughts about Hester, and through how most other women in the society act. The societies thoughts about Hester show that any women who does not follow the normal way of doing things is to be punished and looked down on, even if their actions are completely relevant and harmless. It also represents how harshly women were judged for simply just being a
As an American citizen we seem to make presumption that all cultures are different from ours, and some might even call those cultures weird. Americans fail to realize just how similar we are to these “weird” cultures. By reading Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe and The Great Gatsby by F.Scott Fitzgerald , it makes the reader realize how similar the African culture is from the American culture. There 's those obvious differences we already knew about with the two cultures, but readers can learn that not just American culture value men and give them advantages, but many cultures including 1900 's African culture. In both books we come across two main characters that is portrayed as being more superior compared to others. Okonkwo, main
The Scarlet Letter is a blend of realism, symbolism, and allegory. Nathaniel Hawthorne uses historical settings for this fictional novel and even gives historical background information for the inspiration of the story of Hester Prynne in the introduction of The Scarlet Letter, ‘The Custom-House’. The psychological exploration of the characters and the author’s use of realistic dialogue only add to the realism of the novel. The most obvious symbol of the novel is the actual scarlet letter ‘A’ that Hester wears on her chest every day, but Hawthorne also uses Hester’s daughter Pearl and their surroundings as symbols as well. Allegory is present as well in The Scarlet Letter and is created through the character types of several characters in the novel.