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  1. Nov 26, 2019 · Nathaniel Hawthorne ’s reading in American colonial history confirmed his basically ambivalent attitude toward the American past, particularly the form that Puritanism took in the New England colonies. Especially interested in the intensity of the Puritan-Cavalier rivalry, the Puritan inclination to credit manifestations of the supernatural ...

  2. Rejecting the Calvinistic/Puritan concept of the total depravity of man, Hawthorne demonstrates that atonement for sin can be made with the character of Hester Prynne, marked as an adultress. But ...

  3. Hawthorne, of course, presents the irony of this concept when he describes the prison as a building already worn when the colony is only fifteen years old. Hawthorne's viewpoint of this society seems to be disclosed in several places in the novel but never more so than in the Governor's house in Chapter 7 and during the New England holiday in Chapter 21.

  4. ancestors on what constitutes sin, Hawthorne attributed a beneficial use to sin if the sinner fully repented. He emphasizes a heightened self-awareness in both of his characters, a better understanding of sin when observed in others, and a shift in society’s perception of sin. In this way, Hawthorne deviates from the Puritan views to ...

  5. struggle for political liberty. Thus, his comments on Puritan-. ism cannot be adequately treated unless we understand that. his discussion is manifestly limited to three specific areas: (1) Puritanism as a theology of predestination and universal de-. pravity; (2) Puritanism as a way of life; (3) Puritanism as it.

  6. Hawthorne’s layness, his secular Puritanism. Here is a source of the cen. ral importance that Hawthorne ascribes to sin. After three and a half years in The Old Manse, and thanks to his friendship from college with the now President Franklin Pierce, “Provi-dence took [him] by the hand” (TS 1148),

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  8. Sin In Chapter 1, I focus on the concept of sin, first from the Puritan point of view and then from Hawthorne’s. The New England Puritans believed in collective guilt, as well as certain steps once sin was confessed. While Hawthorne agrees that sin was wrong, he attributes a beneficial use to sin. This shift demonstrates individuality,

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