Perfection In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Birthmark

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In society it is hard to find a time when people are not obsessing over perfection. One can not find the words human and perfect to coexist together because as humans we are never meant to be capable of achieving perfection otherwise individuals could longer be considered mortal. By nature the human race is filled with flaws striking some as early as the DNA sequence is produced to set our appearances in stone. From defects of the body or mind, society continues to find many ways to manifest its fixation to find the ideal aesthetics humanity craves to have, yet it's impossible to deny how humans are defined to have an imperfect existence. Once someone tries to take away essence natural defect that clings to individuals one can find it to be almost like erasing a person's true identity while completely draining them of being human. In the short gothic story “The Birthmark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne when taking a deeper look into what the author is trying to illustrate playing God is a foolish endeavor for nothing on Earth is perfect …show more content…

Her years of prais turn to discuss all due to the influences with her blind husband. Even in death Georgiana consoles her husband for rejecting the best the earth had to offer even when she believed she was flawed. When Aylmer had perfection right in front of him he was to purblind to find just what he has destroyed in the name of science and perfection. The birthmark takes form from the eye of the beholder yet clearly all attitudes towards the mark varied by how others observed and responded to it, mostly in her husband's case. Her self image is changed from from being objectified and her response was expressed as self revulsion leading to shame and self loathing since she fell short of perfect. If one element becomes too powerful it will destroy the other, thus destroying that part of the person and both wholes will never obtain

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