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The Theme Of Shame In The Scarlet Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Shame is a commonly felt emotion, but it has a very dark side to itself. Everyone undergoes times where shame makes a reservation in their hearts. Nathaniel Hawthorne understands the evils of shame. He uses main characters in his story to reveal what truly happens when shame is present. The Scarlet Letter is considered to be the first American novel because it was published in 1850. The story takes place in the 1640’s in Massachusetts in a Puritan society. In the gothic romance novel, The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne illustrates that the fear of public shame and shame itself can lead to repression, alienation, and a crave for revenge. In the beginning of the novel, the audience is introduced to Hester Prynne. She is standing upon the …show more content…

Minister Arthur Dimmesdale is the young man Hester produced a child with. Even though “he loved the truth, and loathed the lie”, Mr. Dimmesdale was terrified at the thought of being shamed like Hester was (131). All of the town’s people adored him and he did not want to let them down. The minister decided to keep his sin locked up inside himself until it killed him from the inside-out. He did not want the people who look up to him to see him as an evil doer. Dimmesdale was repressed in the sense that he kept all his pain locked up and would never let anyone touch the key. The thought of the town detesting him for his mistake led to “the health of Mr. Dimmesdale…[beginning] to fail”(109). He became so afraid of what his peers would think of him he hid his true self.
However, even though Dimmesdale did not want to reveal his sin to the town, he believed he deserved a punishment. Being a religious leader, the minister knew in his heart he needed to feel the shame Hester had embedded in hers. Dimmesdale did not have a mark, such as Hester Prynne with her scarlet letter, for the world to see. But he had a mark inside himself instead of outside. This character had a habit of “[having] his hand over his heart”(169). He felt the shame in his chest and felt the need to cover it up even though his shame was not physically seen by the human eye. This character decided to punish himself. “In Mr. Dimmesdale’s

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