A Thematic Analysis of The Scarlet Letter
A Thematic Analysis of The Scarlet Letter
A Thematic Analysis of The Scarlet Letter
Letter
Parvin Ghasemi
Department of Foreign Languages and Linguistics, Faculty of Literature and
Humanities, Shiraz University, Pardis Eram, Shiraz 71944, Iran
e-mail: [email protected], [email protected]
Pyeaam Abbasi
Department of English, Faculty of Foreign Languages, Isfahan University,
Azadi Square, Boulevard of Daneshga, Isfahan, Iran
e-mail: [email protected]
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1
Refer to Karl Marx's Early Writings (1851).
Gashemi, A Thematic Analysis of Hawthorne's 3
If one dares "stand out from society … [they] are often crushed by the
system" (p. 808). This is when there exists no hope of reconciliation
between the Puritan consciousness and natural instincts attributed to the
self. By offering loyalty, respectability and hereafter joy as disguises and
demanding sheer obedience from the members, the Puritan Culture
imposes, in reality, a hegemony which, as Williams (1976) asserts, is "a
lived system of meanings and values – constitutive and constituting – …”;
"taken for granted and real by people”, and "a sense of absolute … beyond
which it is very difficult … to move …" and what the two symbolic figures
–Hester and Dimmesdale— do is a symbolic violation of the absolute and
a move beyond the apparent blessings (Webster, 1993, p. 62).
Therefore, the members of the society are subconsciously involved in
abiding by the rules set reminding us of Althusser's "Ideological State
Apparatuses" that are more effective than "Repressed State Apparatuses"
(Webster, 1993, p. 59). Thus, people lose their freedom to feel, think,
decide and act. The look from the authorities on individuals then becomes
downward and we see them standing in a balcony above where Hester the
symbol of individuality is located – the scaffold. Ipso facto the authorities
by deriving individuals of the power to distinguish between appearance
and reality mark themselves as sacrosanct models following whom leads to
heaven, and hell awaits those who disobey. This is what the Puritan Culture
knows by heart, for in The Scarlet Letter, we are faced with a crowd –"the
crowd here is the whole of society" (Doren, 1966, p. 136) – coming from
"an earlier time, broad shouldered, ruddy cheeked, firm of step …. They
were a stern people … repressive. They probably put the lid on more
natural human impulses and emotions than any society before or since"
(Salami, 1999, p. 444). The ruling class well aware of what has been put in
the heart and mind of the crowd uses ‘ideological apparatuses’ to legally
constitute laws for people, and ideology represents "a way of legitimating
the power of the ruling class in society" (Webster, 1993, p. 59). When the
apparently supported and proved conventions are institutionalized, then
Gashemi, A Thematic Analysis of Hawthorne's 5
reality of themselves. For the Puritans the forest is a place of evil and
ironically it becomes a holy place for Hester and Dimmesdale: it is where
they meet and "practice a holy feeling accompanied by beautiful and holy
elements of nature" (Connolly, 1970, p. 15). The Puritan Culture is defined
by the forest and the qualities it represents linking Hester with anti-
Christian values. In the forest Hester shapes her true and real individuality
and gives, with a Jungian glance at the setting, rise to her unconscious
ready to feel differently, and like the wilderness, challenges subjugation by
her words. In a way Mistress Hibbins, practicing witchcraft, becomes
another revolutionary figure by joining the witches and enjoying the
freedom accorded to them. And above all "witches enjoyed a rare privilege
in a society that buried so many things – the privilege of telling the truth"
(Salami, 1999, p. 442): for, witchcraft was regarded as an evil practice just
because of its freedom in revealing the real and rejecting the apparent truth.
DIMMESDALE / HESTER
"I must stand up in my pulpit, and meet so many eyes turned upward
to my face, as if the light of heaven were beaming from it! … and then look
inward, and discern the black reality of what they idolize?" Dimmesdale
continues that in "agony of heart" he has "laughed" at "the contrast between
what I seem and what I am!" (Harding, 1990, p. 191).
It has been reported that Hawthorne was very much in favor of a
character with a secret sin hidden in the depth of the heart. Hawthorne has
explored the theme of appearance versus reality in his characters, mainly
Dimmesdale and Hester, as bearers of a hidden guilt that has changed their
lives significantly. What Hawthorne does is the exploration of
Dimmesdale's character whose story is that of a "sensitive young man's
initiation into sexuality with ill grace" (Salami, 1999, p. 438). Dimmesdale
has, in appearance, a cloak on, which hides the reality of his sin and instead
helps him wear an acceptable face. What burns him inside and in silence is
taken to be the light of a celestial man standing before the mob.
Dimmesdale is tortured by the guilt, for he is put in the center of the
conflict between appearance – what he preaches – and reality – what he has
committed. The anguish, the torture and the burden are so real to
Dimmesdale that they give him "a real existence on this earth …"
(Harding, 1990, p. 191). .
Gashemi, A Thematic Analysis of Hawthorne's 7
his distress towards the appearance, and defile man-made laws: "I should
long ago have thrown off these garments of mock holiness, and have
shown myself to mankind as they will see me at the judgment-seat" (p.
192). "Garments of mock holiness" are suggestive of the rules –religious–
that have nothing to do with what is holy and right and are mocking
enough to be obeyed with no light of illumination. Dimmesdale's sermons
are moving and poetic to mock the reason-bound and devoid-of-sentiment
language of the ministers. The irony of a fearful hypocrite man making
such sermons that make people cease to fear anything but the Lord, the
Omniscient, Omnipotent God shows how paying-off the Puritan Culture
has been and instrumental in blurring the boundary between apparent and
real. Dimmesdale is forgiven and redeemed, for "his suffering makes him
beautiful and because Hester continues to love him" (Doren, 1966, p. 133).
As many authors speak through their characters, many critics have,
since 1850, debated the idea that Hawthorne is after justifying a prohibited
sin and introducing Hester as a cult heroine seeking fulfillment in her
union; or, that Hawthorne is depicting Hester responsible for her
wrongdoing.
Hester, as a figure representative of fresh and striking views and non-
conformities, may be a reminder of Hawthorn's interest in the American
Transcendental Movement with its emphasis on the natural world and soul.
Nevertheless, there is more to Hester's motives as well as potentialities of
her nature. When it comes to the analysis of her motives, the reader is
likely to refer to her love for Dimmesdale as the real motivation. In
appearance she is a fallen woman, disloyal to Puritan-defined rules while in
reality, enriched by Dimmesdale's love, she changes to a cult heroine loyal
to the laws of her own nature taken as her "inner life" which in Ziff's words
"can be more real than … outer life" (Ziff, 1966, p. 124). And here we are
presented with another outcast or renegade or whatever "trodden under all
men's feet" (Harding, 1990, p. 118) who will be crushed for not being in
line with the system. As a matter of fact, "the reference to William
Hawthorne's infamous cruelty to the Quaker Ann Coleman anticipates the
punishment of Hester …" (p. 39). The female protagonist "is judged as a
guilty harlot even though she is actually a loyal loving woman" (Campbell,
1997, p. 721). The differences in value and standards show the contrast
between appearance and reality and "tremendous pressure against those
who violate the laws of society" (p. 721). The pressure is so intense that it
pushes Hester to a mental trauma and changes her to a renegade who
Gashemi, A Thematic Analysis of Hawthorne's 9
breaks free of the Puritan rules to become the worshipper of the temple of
her own nature. She cannot tolerate a society that will not allow her to
reveal her true and real identity: an identity backed up with unique qualities
that separate her from other passive and obedient members. The narrator is
taken even by her physical beauty: "she had in her nature a rich,
voluptuous, oriental characteristic, a taste for the gorgeously beautiful"
(Harding, 1990, p. 83).
Now for such a beautiful, wild, passionate character, Chillingworth,
who seems to be a devoted physician but who is a vengeful evil man,
cannot be a proper counterpart. Hester, thinking of escaping with
Dimmesdale is similar to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre a passionate woman
dubious about going off to France with Mr. Rochester with whom she is
deeply in love. Dimmesdale and Mr. Rochester might, at the first glance,
seem villains for having violated society-defined conventions. Suffering
from their own particular weaknesses, the two of them seem to be Byronic
heroes who are often "handsome, but like Lord Byron himself, who was
lame, they may have a physical handicap that only increases their sex
appeal" (Salami, 1999, p. 253). Moreover, both of them suffer from a sin or
scandal that marks each one's past. The reader, having been given access to
those levels of conscious and subconscious unknown to the world around,
is likely to take side with them. All these two characters show is a saturnine
front and appearance via which the reality of the experienced moment
cannot be read. The Byronic hero is "an idealist" and the "sensitivity can
only be revealed … when he manages to find a superior woman who can
understand his true nature" (Salami, 1999, p. 253). Hester and
Dimmesdale, from a Puritanical point of view, appear as rebels however,
as idealists, they are after defining their own religion, consummating it as
saints who stand as threats to the society.
One matter of concern with regard to what Hester has done is whether
she justifies it or not. Harding (1990) believes that "there is no suggestion
that she believes her adulterous love is justified by its intensity or
spontaneity" (p. xviii). However, she does not regret what she has done, for
the best thing came out of it: Pearl, and of course "in giving her [Pearl]
existence, a great law had been broken" (p. 91). Hester knows and morally
accepts her sinful act and the judgment that follows showing no
resentments or challenges to the power holders. In appearance Hester has
reached the end for having an unforgivable sin but sin for her is a
beginning; in fact, sin, with the weakening power it has, in the hands of
10 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 1, JUNE 2009: 1-17
new outlooks appear and become meaningful (Harding, 1990, p. 79). She
becomes the harbinger of a new religion in which affection is the first word
to be loudly preached.
RELIGION / LOVE
member of the Puritan Culture, with God. Hester shows no respect for the
world's law, for she knows a higher reality and truth than that practiced by
the Puritans. This higher reality for Hester is love to which she remains
loyal and with which she remains united. In the holy name of love she, as a
cult heroine, stands up to a religion that appears merciful but is ugly and
cruel to true love and affection. She stands up against a religion that has
deprived her of her right to love and be loved. As a real religious and pious
woman, Hester knows and believes that religion "must become a vital
principle, it must affect the heart and act upon the passions, before it can
greatly modify the character of man in society" (Godwin, 1974, p. 317),
which means that her sin is rooted in the most perfect of all feelings: love,
and the bitter irony shows how the Puritan Culture has been successful in
obscuring the difference between appearance and reality and not successful
in subjugating all its members.
Hester believes in the healing power of love and the changes it affords
men. Hester's religion is that of heart and not head, and that affection brings
joy. The narrator sees Hester as an "angel and apostle of the coming
revelation … lofty … beautiful … wise" who will arrive through "ethereal
medium of joy" revealing "how sacred love should make us happy, by the
truest test of a life successful to such an end!" (Harding, 1990, p. 263).
Bestowed with the power of love, Hester is able to change everything
and show the reality of appearances. She is able to create a new identity, a
real personal identity different from the apparent social one. The new
identity is nourished through the feeling of love and her relationship with
Dimmesdale.
Hester's self is empowered through sympathy and relationship with
others. She becomes strong enough to change the implications of the
scarlet letter she is doomed to wear, to fresh and novel implications.
SABLE / GULES
At last Hester bends the 'Sable' Puritanism to show the 'Gules' reality
of her self. On Hester's slab appears "On a field, Sable, the letter A, Gules"
(p. 264). Brant (1958) suggests that the last line of Marvell's The
Unfortunate Lover may be a source for the saying: “Forced to live in
Storms and Wars: / Yet dying leaves a perfume here, / And Musick within
every Ear: / And he in story only rules, / In a Field Sable, a Lover Gules”
(Harding, 1990, p. 293).
Gashemi, A Thematic Analysis of Hawthorne's 13
What is noteworthy here is the opposition of black and red that appears
as a color motif throughout the work adding to its thematic unity.
Hawthorne has tried to portray a black culture which is willing to disguise
its members' red feelings and passion in black. The symbolic black is
attributed and enriched with dualistic qualities and the black by which
Puritanism is meant to be different from the dark of night and the forest.
At the very beginning, the writer draws the reader's attention towards
the prison and the "black rose-bush" having sprung up there and then the
jailor who is "black, grim, ugly-eyed old man!" (Harding, 1990, p. 229)
symbolizing the dark, macabre atmosphere of the setting. There, then,
appears Governor Bellingham the "guard of honor" with "a black velvet
tunic" (p. 64) with John Wilson, the eldest clergyman of Boston, at the
center of focus looking like a "darkly engraved portrait" (p. 65), and even at
the Market Place the narrator notices the "general tint" of "human life" as
"sad grey … or black" (p. 232). And the whole Puritanism with its
ministers looks like "pine-trees, aged, black, and solemn" (p. 95).
The depiction of major scenes exhibits the black Puritanical mode of
life and age. In such a black atmosphere and among the aged and withered
spirits there appears Hester the defender of love, a critic of blind obedience,
wearing the letter A embroidered in red and shining like a jewel throwing
"a lurid gleam along the dark passage-way of the interior" (p. 69). What
Hester does is a symbolic, sincere attempt to remove herself and
Dimmesdale out of the black framework of Puritanism in order to reveal
her real and red thoughts and feelings. It is in chapter 17 that the narrator
refers to the emotional openness of Hester and Dimmesdale as they are
standing together "with the sanguine passion of hand clasped in hand" (p.
195). Hester's passionate nature is so sanguine that at the time of
"pestilence" or "calamity," she appears in "the household that was darkened
by trouble" with the red letter glimmering "with comfort in its unearthly
ray" (p. 161). Indeed numerous references to the letter A bestow unity upon
the work. Any time Hester appears the letter A is there on her breast, each
time suggesting an implication. The letter A is hardly recognizable for the
reader to stand for a definite indisputable image or fixed signifier. The
sexton refers to "a great red letter in the sky" (p. 158), and the meteor
makes a dome-like shape, "the letter A, --marked out in lines of dull red
light,--" (p. 155) in the black sky. The appearance of comets may predict
the destruction of tyrants and the termination of rulers: an end Hester and
the letter A may suggest to the community. Hester, who is literally and
14 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 1, JUNE 2009: 1-17
after flaunting a long-held tradition of Puritan Culture. The token for many
had come to mean "her [Hester's] many good deeds since" (p. 162). Hester
constructs her life through helping others and keeping alive the letter A
suggesting the red light of deep love in the dark sky of Puritanism. Here
Hester's strength in transfiguring the signifier A is of paramount
significance. Hester is able to transform the meaning from appearance and
what it appears to be, to the reality of it by subverting the Puritan
connotations of such symbols.
What the "society would make into a stigma of shame, Hester converts
into a thing of beauty, just as she converts the living symbol of the letter A,
Pearl, into a thing of beauty by her elegant dress" (Connolly, 1970, p. 14).
By refusing to let her scarlet letter be removed, she symbolically remains
loyal to her lover – Arthur – and her real identity as Able and Angel and
becomes "a living sermon Against [emphasis mine] sin" (Harding, 1990, p.
63) of hiding the truth and making people put on false faces and be good
and loyal members in appearance.
As a writer interested in the secret sins people may carry in their hearts,
Hawthorne explores the implications of a secret act of a soul in New
England, Boston. Hawthorne presents the reader with the Puritan Culture
with all the apparatuses the system employs in order to subjugate its
members and hide the truth.
Hawthorne's social, moral, and religious milieu provided him with raw
materials which went into this superb literary piece that is the story of two
characters living with the weight of what they have done and what follows.
The novel puts forward the everlasting conflict between the society and the
individual. What is novel and eye-catching is the recurrent theme of
appearance versus reality woven into different elements of the novel all
throughout. Man's individuality has always been threatened and in some
cases stifled by convention which is disguised in varied forms such as
religion, family, society-defined rules, and particular social, political,
economical codes. Rejection of each can be taken as the assertion of a new
reality and identity, the eruption of which threatens the foundations of
priesthood or whatever is hidden under the cloak and appearance of
morality.
As a matter of fact, it is the very theme of appearance versus reality by
which Hawthorne presents a symbolic figure with a symbolic violation of
the society-defined rules and the unexpected consequences. That is what
makes readers lack consensus about the final meaning and interpretation of
the characters and events.
16 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 1, JUNE 2009: 1-17
CONCLUSION
The Scarlet Letter is not only about good and evil but appearance and
reality, a theme practiced all throughout the novel. As it is stated at the end
of the novel, "no man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to
himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as
to which may be the true" (p. 216). Dimmesdale and Hester are judged
based on appearance, and a gradual revelation of their reality marks them
as adversaries to those who want to blur the difference between appearance
and reality. The narrator, in the concluding chapter, cries "Be true! Be true!
Show freely to the world, if not your worst, yet some trait whereby the
worst may be inferred!" (p. 260) to show how the Puritan Culture provides
the characters with a setting where "the secret acts of the soul are matters of
public concern, in which the [symbolic act of] adultery is a crime against
the state," (Ziff, 1966, p. 126) and ironically the letter A must be worn to
make the secret public, and therefore to intensify the confusion. However,
Hester's religion is one of love and affection and with the power she is
bestowed, she subverts Puritanical significations to create new ones and
therefore takes refuge in her heart to gain more power from the scarlet letter
and reject the 'sable' culture. Hawthorne shows the reality of the token,
what in appearance is a "scorching stigma" (Harding, 1990, p. 247) while
in reality and by Hester has changed to a badge of courage, affection and
ability.
Hester's lover also has the brand of sin on his heart and as a violator of
the Puritanical codes makes the reality known to all that we are all sinners,
yet some are disguised in cloaks as law makers and gods. Hester reveals
the fact that under every 'Gules' letter, there lie much deeper meanings than
what the 'Sable' culture tries to uphold.
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