Hawthorne’s Retributive Justice in The Scarlet Letter

المؤلفون

  • Asst. Instructor: Hamid Badry Abdul Salam Koya University/Faculty of Humanities and Education School of Foreign Languages/ Translation Department

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.57592/djhr.v1i52.1944

الملخص

Hawthorne’s Retributive Justice in

The Scarlet Letter

The purpose of this paper is to analyze critically Hawthorne’s concept of retributive justice in The Scarlet Letter. As a social moralizer, Hawthorne sets his action in the puritanic town of Salem where sinners are always met by that community, with a sense of superiority and arrogance. Thus, instead of showing understanding and love, the Puritans become intolerant of Hester’s sin. Though a direct descendant of a Puritan family, Hawthorne shows compassion with his heroine; however, he denies her the chance to elope with her partner, Minister Arthur Dimmesdale. Sin according to Hawthorne is a reality that must be confronted; and once a sin is committed its consequences: alienation, remorse, despair, are inescapable. To cleanse the soul, he casts heavy reliance on confession for its redemptive force.

التنزيلات

منشور

19-08-2022

إصدار

القسم

بحـــــــوث العــــــدد

كيفية الاقتباس

Hawthorne’s Retributive Justice in The Scarlet Letter. (2022). مجلة ديالى للبحوث الانسانية, 1(52). https://doi.org/10.57592/djhr.v1i52.1944