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Patriarchy In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

Fulfilling the image of a corrupt and sinful world, society devalues women and demeans their existences, oppressing them into a world of submissiveness and destruction. The patriarchy not only have detrimental effects on women, but the entire world as well. However, women have always exhibit strength and development despite the lack of opportunities, and they reveal the virtuousness of moral character. In the 19th century dark romantic novel, The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne reveals the atrocities of the patriarchy and masculine hegemony in society and thereby perceive women as the current redeemer of humankind’s sin. He, thereby, urges individuals to deter from the idea of women solely carrying the burdens of humankind’s sin and to …show more content…

Critics generally agree Hawthorne uses the effects of the scarlet letter to reveal the atrocities of the patriarchy and masculine hegemony. The patriarchal forces women to carry the burden of an action despite the entity of the original sinners. In The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne takes the responsibilities and consequences of adultery, even though Dimmesdale should have equal, if not more, punishment. When Hester stands in front of a jury and endures the tremendous hatred from the individuals within the audience who believe Hester “has brought shame” to society, she declares,“Ye cannot take it off, and would that I might endure his agony, as well as mine!” (Hawthorne 39, 49). Hawthorne reveals how society isolates and condemns women for the actions and results of men. If the women do not hold the accountability of all sin, they experience ignominy from society; if they do hold accountability of all sin, they still experience ignominy. The patriarchy enforces the idea that women should hold all responsibilities for all of men’s actions. Advancing Hawthorne's argument, critic Jane Swisshelm reveals the treatment of women as they endure ignominy: “[Hester] was the moral leper whom none might dare to touch - the blazing emblem of the virtuous indignation of an entire community” (Swisshelm 273). So long women exist, the consequences of the world’s …show more content…

Eventually, Dimmesdale confesses to his sins and asks for people to “forgive thee,” believing the death by “triumphant ignominy” brings mercy and preventing the loss of his existence (Hawthorne 161). For individuals with a moral conscious, the punishment of their actions relieves the guilt of allowing others to receive their sufferings. By claiming their accountability, they restore their sense of purpose and existence, they believe that they found themselves. Individuals should relinquish the patriarchy and masculine hegemony and aim for total equality, for the effects of the patriarchy proves detrimental to all with a sense of morality. Critic Stroner extends Hawthorne’s argument that individuals leave with a “comforting truth” that Dimmesdale would rid himself of the guilty conscious prior to his death (Stroner). When individuals receive the justice of rewards or punishment they deserve, those individuals prevents the forsakenness of their souls, they comfort others with preservation of their morality. Relinquishing the hypocrisy of their actions of hegemonic masculinity against their sense of morality, individuals have the ability to forgive themselves for both the original sin and the sin of secretive oppression. By ending the neglect of responsibility, all individuals would have the ability to carry equal burden of societal sin rather than

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