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    Scarlet Letter

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    English III H P.3 October 16‚ 2012 Mr. Dicus The Scarlet Letter Regret as a verb is defined as “to feel sorry about something previously done that now appears wrong.” Throughout The Scarlet Letter‚ Nathaniel Hawthorne uses characterizations to illustrate Hester Prynne’s journey of overcoming her regret‚ adultery‚ on which this whole book is written. The puritan people intended to shame Hester when she is branded a sinner with the use of a scarlet colored “A”‚ but Hester learns to embrace the “A”

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    Mira Susa‚ Jennifer Welsh Mr. Jordan AP Language and Composition 19 November 2009 “Chapter 17” Chapter 17‚ “The Pastor and His Parishioner‚” of The Scarlet Letter‚ starts off with Dimmesdale returning from his journey through the dark forest‚ upon which Hester waits faithfully for him out of the public eye‚ and more importantly‚ Chillingworth. The scene is gloomy; it is noon‚ however‚ the sun is shaded by a clouded sky and the thick foliage of the forest‚ transforming it into a gray

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    In the novel‚ “Little Scarlet”‚ the author Walter Mosley is discussing the ordeal the riots have created in Watts. In 1965‚ riots had become the only way for people to express their feelings towards racial inequality. The 1965 riots also highlighted issues within the police department. The novel exposed crimes that were going on as a result of the riots. Throughout the novel‚ Walter Mosley introduces various characters to paint a picture of society in 1965. Mosley uses a murder as a twisted plot

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    The Scarlet Letter The scarlet letter is a tragedy. The puritan society is responsible for Dimmesdale ’s downfall because its members expect him to be perfect‚ and he is not. His inability to give the people what they require from him ultimately leads to his downfall. Dimmesdale has an affair with Hester Prynne‚ a married Puritan woman. Hester gives birth to their daughter‚ Pearl. "Children have always a sympathy in the agitations of those connected with them; always‚ especially‚ a sense of any

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    The Scarlet Pimpernel

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    orth As A The Scarlet Pimpernel: Sir Percy’s Worth as A Hero In the novel The Scarlet Pimpernel‚ written by Baroness Orczy‚ Sir Percy Blankley is able to deceive those he loves in order to save the lives of those he barely knows. Leading a double life‚ he acts as a fool of an English lord in order hide the fact that he is really a cunning‚ elusive man who goes by the name “The Scarlet Pimpernel.” When using this name to do his good deeds‚ Sir Percy risks his life in order to rescue French aristocracy

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    The Scarlet Letter

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    Symbols in The Scarlet Letter Symbolism plays an important role in many novels. Held with the distinction of implying important themes‚ symbols add depth to a story. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The Scarlet Letter takes place in Boston‚ Massachusetts‚ in the 1640’s. Embellished with symbols and hidden themes‚ the novel tells “a tale of human frailty and sorrow” (Hawthorne 46). In addition to human flaw and sadness‚ the novel reveals inhumane punishment and torture from the government and citizens

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    In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter‚ the themes of exposure and justice are prevalent throughout. The author uses the image of a scaffold in the center of town as a symbol of two contradicting ideas: public shame and freedom. The Puritan community in which the story takes place lives by strong Biblical and legalistic standards with the ultimate goal of establishing a utopian society. In the words of Hawthorne‚ the strict Puritan law code was set up for the purpose of dragging iniquity out

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    allegorical images because she is nearly all symbol‚ little reality. Dimmesdale sees Pearl as the "freedom of a broken law"; Hester sees her as "the living hieroglyphic" of their sin; and the community sees her as the result of the devil’s work. She is the scarlet letter in the flesh‚ a reminder of Hester’s sin. As Hester tells the pious community leaders in Chapter 8‚ ". . . she is my happiness! —

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    Nathaniel Hawthorne‚ a critically acclaimed American writer of the 19th century‚ was born in Salem‚ Massachusetts in 1804. The novelist’s book‚ The Scarlet Letter‚ is supposedly his best work‚ and universally considered a literary classic. Concerned with sin and consequences of dealing with it‚ Hawthorne’s work relates to his own personal sense of shame about his ancestor’s persecuting roles in the 17th century Salem Witch Trials. By indirectly dealing with his sense of guilt through fictional circumstances

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    completely different from working in the critical traditions. Postmodernists call for a radically different orientation toward phenomena such as data‚ methods and analysis and for a radical reformulation of the nature of research and its representation‚ offer us a vocabulary and perspective that is refreshingly different from interpretive and critical traditions. They invite scholars to become more playful and ironic conducting a research and favor the method of blending multiple genres (historical

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