The Scarlet Letter
• novel (notice title is
italicized)
• written by Nathaniel
Hawthorne (b. 1804)
• written about 1850
• set in Boston, Mass.
about 1690
Boston
(setting of The
Scarlet Letter)
Plymouth
(where Mayflower landed
in 1620/setting for
Bradford’s memoir Of
Plymouth Plantation)
Setting: The Scarlet Letter
• The setting of Hawthorne’s novel is
critical to the plot of the novel.
• 1690’s Boston was a Puritan village
• Like other Puritan settlements in New
England, the local and colonial
governments were theocracies.
theocracy
•
•
•
•
word comes from Greek
theo = God
cratos = rule
a theocracy is a government where
the civil laws are based (in whole or
in part) on religious laws; civil
leaders in theocracies are probably
also important religious leaders
theocracy, cont.
• In Afghanistan before 2001,
the Taliban controlled
religious and civil laws.
Besides having to wear
burqas in public, women in
Afghanistan were not
allowed to attend school or
drive cars.
• In Saudi Arabia, women
cannot drive or vote.
Because Islam forbids it, no
place in Saudi Arabia sells
alcohol or pork.
Theocracy as Extremism
Ironically, it is largely because of
the Puritans – who themselves
established a theocratic
government in the New World –
that we in America tend to view
most theocratic governments as
extremist.
Puritanism
• Began in England in the mid-1500’s
• A sect of Calvinists
• Calvinism named after Swiss theologian
John Calvin
• Calvinism =
– predetermination
– no religious authority BUT Scripture
“Puritans”
• “Puritans” intended as a derogatory term
• “Puritans” usually referred to themselves as
“the Godly”
• Puritans fell quickly out of favor in
England, where the king was the head of
the Church of England.
• They recognized neither the king’s secular
or religious authority, and so quickly
became enemies of civil and religious
leaders.
The Puritan Role in
Development of “American”
Character
• In 1600, the Puritans left England for
Holland, which even in the 17th century was
a very liberal society.
• It was too liberal for the Puritans, though,
who disliked the government’s
permissiveness and tolerance of
behaviors/attitudes they found unacceptable.
The Puritan Role in
Development of “American”
Character, cont.
• In 1620, the Puritans left Holland for the
New World.
• Established Plymouth Plantation in the
“savage wilderness” of New England.
• Retained those aspects of European society
they liked; created new laws, policies, etc.
to replace the elements of society they did
not like.
The Puritan Role in
Development of
“American” Character, cont.
• Because Scripture was central to religion and
government, scholarship was a highly valued
right (reserved, of course, to men only).
• The role of religious leaders was to present
Scripture and guide other church members in
its understanding and application.
• Puritan religious leaders were NEVER seen as
intermediaries or intercessors.
The Puritan Role in
Development of
“American” Character, cont.
• “Puritan leaders were highly trained scholars,
whose education tended to translate into
positions that were often authoritarian.”
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/PURITAN/purhist.html
• “There was a built-in hierarchism in this sense,
but one which mostly reflected the age.”
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/PURITAN/purhist.html
• Very Important: Anybody (theoretically) could
rise to the same level of authority.
So…
The Puritan emphasis on:
•
self-reliance
•
independence
•
individual achievement
•
individual responsibility
•
personal accountability
•
power through ability
(education)
• All of which were
discouraged in the
Old World become
the basis of
“American Rugged
Individualism”
• This is probably why
most Americans
disagree so strongly
with theocracies
Puritan “Crime and Punishment”
• Because Puritan Boston c. 1690 was still a theocratic
society, crime against church (or God) was the
equivalent of a crime against another person or against
“the State.”
• Yes… it was illegal to miss church on Sabbath days. It
was also illegal to sleep during sermons that could run 3
or more hours long – during each session (morning and
afternoon) on a Sabbath.
http://www.materialreligion.org/objects/dec96obj.html
Puritan “Crime and
Punishment”, cont.
The
Stocks
http://etc.usf.edu/clipart/2100/2111/pillory_1_md.gif
• Virtually any offense could land you in
the pillory, or stocks. The Puritans
imported this punishment to New
England from England.
• Entire purpose was public display and
public humiliation.
• Stocks were built on a scaffold in the
center of the village, where townspeople
could mock the offender, and throw
rotten vegetables or stones. Aside from
the offender’s hands being immobilized,
his ears would frequently be nailed to
the board behind his head.
Puritan “Crime and
Punishment”, cont.
• After serving time in a jail and then
on the pillory, a convicted criminal
would often be required to wear
some outward sign of his or her
offense.
• In 1637, as punishment for writing
an essay that criticized the
archbishop, William Prynne (no
relation to the central character in
The Scarlet Letter) – after being put
in the stocks – had the letters “SL”
(for “seditious libeler”) branded
onto his cheeks.
http://history.wisc.edu/sommerville/367/367-06.htm
The “scarlet letter” of
the novel’s title
refers to a scarlet
letter “A” that the
novel’s main
character is made to
wear on her clothing
as punishment for her
crime of adultery.
“The Custom House” and The Scarlet Letter
• The introductory chapter to The Scarlet Letter is called
“The Custom House”.
• Nathaniel Hawthorne tells of his time as a clerk in the
Salem, Mass. Government Custom House.
• He claims to have found a letter written by Hester Prynne
(the novel’s main character) and an embroidered scarlet A.
The letter tells of Hester’s experiences, which Hawthorne
relates in the novel.
• The novel is NOT based in historical fact, but Hawthorne
uses “The Custom House” to give his story credibility.
• Hawthorne’s family came from Boston. He was descendant
of a judge in the Salem witch trials (named Hathorne).
Hawthorne changed the spelling of his name to distance
himself from his relative’s unsavory reputation.
http://www.hawthorneinsalem.org/Life&Times/BiographicalInfo/Adultlife/MMD1114.html
The Custom House
• Describes the interior/exterior of
the Custom House
• Describes Hawthorne’s feelings
about his native town of Salem
• Makes critical comments about the
Whig party/ reveals Hawthorne’s
involvement as a Democrat
• Describes his early attempts to
write Hester’s story.
The story…
• Deals with the strange and mysterious
• Involves symbolic imagination
• Turns to the past for subject matter
Focus
• The story is focused on the problem of evil
and the nature of sin.
• It analyzes the human mind and heart
through the simple concept of GUILT
• Hawthorne analyzes the effects of sin on the
four main characters
Themes
•
•
•
•
Moral Law versus Civil Law
Sin
Nature of Evil
Nature versus Society
Moral Law versus Civil Law
• The sin of adultery, in the book, is a crime
against the civil law, but not necessarily the
moral law.
• She loves the man she has an affair with and
therefore, in the eyes of nature is not a
committing a crime.
• In the eyes of the church, and the law
therefore, she is violating a civil law though.
Sin
• Sin results in the book in the physical
deterioration of the sinner.
• Each character commits sin and each
character deals with sin differently.
• The act of not learning from their sin results
in the downfall of the individual.
Nature of Evil
• Asks the questions?
– Who is evil?
– Who represents evil?
– What is true evil?
Nature
• Civilization versus the Wilderness
– Where are people more civilized?
Symbol
• The Scarlet Letter
– Symbolizes sin, shame, and identity
• The color red
– Symbolizes beauty and untamed nature
• Pearl
– She symbolizes her mother’s sin
• The Meteor
– Symbolizes the Puritan's ignorance of nature
Hester Prynne
• Book’s protagonist
• Wears a scarlet A to symbolize her adultery
• Is married, but has an affair with the
reverend.
• Hester will not reveal the name of her lover
• Hester is the embodiment of the top levels
of morality
Pearl
• Hester’s illegitimate daughter by
Dimmsdale
• Moody, mysterious, and has an ability to
perceive things others do not perceive
• People believe her father is the devil
Reverend Arthur Dimmsdale
• A young reverend
• Intelligent and emotional, Dimmsdale still
hides his affair and lets Hester take the
punishment
• Suffers his sin silently
Roger Chillingworth
• Hester’s true husband
• He disguises himself as a doctor so that no
one in the colony knows he is alive except
Hester
• He spends his life trying to find out who
Hester’s lover is so that he may punish the
man