Public Dichotomy In The Scarlet Letter

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In the novel The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne uses a public versus private dichotomy to differentiate between character’s outward appearances and their inward states. The public and private features of each character contribute to the question of whether it is more important to conform to cultural demands or to satisfy their personal impulses. This dichotomy guides the reader to wait until the novel’s end for the meeting between the force of the community/societal demands and the force of individual impulses. Those two forces are distinct opposites which will ultimately reveal the truth that both the reader and the community have long been seeking. Overall, Hawthorne’s use of the public versus private dichotomy allows the reader to …show more content…

In this novel, the narrator shows us the contrast between the force of a community and the force of individual impulse. The force of the community puts the characters in a situation that disables them from being completely honest. The force of individual impulse may cause characters to admit things they do not want to in order to clear their guilty conscious and also may cause characters to sin (i.e Dimmesdale’s individual impulse led him to commit adultery). On page 164, Pearl asks her mother, “Was that the same minister that kissed me by the brook?” her mother responds, “Hold thy peace, dear little Pearl! .... We must not talk in the marketplace of what happens to us in the forest.” Although Dimmesdale, in the middle of giving his greatest sermon, wants to tell the community about his sin right there in the marketplace (force of individual impulse), he is fastened into his position in society (force of community) and, therefore, cannot admit his sin at that moment, although he would soon do so. The forces of individual impulse and of the Puritan Community weigh largely on characters ability to be honest with others. Robert Chillingworth lives the last period of his life under a different identity because of his individual impulse for revenge on Dimmesdale, as well as his placement in the community. After being the community’s doctor for a significant amount of time, the community, much like they …show more content…

In the chapter titled “The Revelation of the Scarlet Letter,” Dimmesdale finally gives into his personal impulse and admits to the sin of adultery which he committed. This dramatic ending displays the tragic collision of public image versus private conscience. Hawthorne strategically shows the contrast between the public lives and the private lives of the main characters. This is done in order to, not only show the differences between the two, but also to foreshadow the ending of the book for the reader. At the midway point of the book, a quality reader can infer that this novel can only end with secrets being admitted and the truth ultimately being revealed. This strategy of using the public versus private dichotomy was successful in producing a dramatic and catastrophic finale to The Scarlet

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