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Theme Of Guilt In The Minister's Black Veil

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The Manipulation of Sin and Guilt The notion of sin and guilt controls not only individuals, but society as a whole. Sin can be either recognized or ignored; as a result of recognition, societies and individuals are able to better themselves, but when ignored, sin is still manifested in those within; in order to fully make progress in one’s character, sin has yet to be recognized.In the parable “The Minister’s Black Veil,” Nathaniel Hawthorne initially illustrates a town full of “good people,” but then contradicts this idea, proving, through a black veil, that all people live with concealed and ashamed pasts. This can be parallelled to the Theories of Guilt that discuss how humans are controlled by their shameful pasts. As the town …show more content…

Previous to this presentation of wrongdoing, the townspeople tried to push away any sinful conceptions that they may have felt before Reverend Hooper’s preamble. The veil resurrects their shame of any past wrongdoing and is a constant reminder that wrongdoings exists. However, the townspeople “noticed that they felt better when they lost sight of the black veil.” (2). Although the persons are conscious of the presence of their sins and guilt, the black veil’s disappearance comforts them; it seems to represent their sins being taken away, and in doing so, the townspeople briefly overcome their anxiety of exposure. The townspeople featured in the parable of “The Minister’s Black Veil” possess the Theories of Guilt conveyed in modern applications of Hawthorne, as they are influenced and controlled by their guiltiness and by those who present their culpability to them; in this case, the Minister and his black veil. Reverend Hooper uses his veil to initiate the presence of guilt and gives the townspeople insight to how “‘like any other emotion, guilt can be controlled and manipulated to influence others.” Since the characters are somewhat “controlled” by the black veil and its correlation to sin; their previously apparent easygoing personalities have become introverted. They now live in fear, hoping that whatever previous sin that they committed will not come back to haunt them. At the beginning of the “The

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