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Nov 26, 2019 · The stories are pervasively and often brilliantly symbolic, and Hawthorne’s symbolic imagination encompasses varieties ranging from more or less clear-cut allegory to elusive multiple symbolic patterns whose significance critics debate endlessly.
Of this primal birth, the hand is the divine signature, the mark of the hand of the maker. Hawthorne further identifies this divine sign when he links it to another signature of divinity, comparing the fading of the crimson hand from Georgiana's cheek with "the stain of the rainbow fading out of the sky."
In his story “The Birthmark” Nathaniel Hawthorne assigns symbolic meaning to the blemish on Georgiana’s cheek, to her husband Aylmer’s efforts to eliminate it, and to Georgiana herself. Through the study of these symbols we can discover Hawthorne’s motivation for Aylmer’s risky experiment. Text. Nathaniel Hawthorne, “The Birthmark”, 1843.
The emerging field of evolutionary psychology offers powerful explanatory insight into these responses; indeed, the set of cognitive adaptations known as Theory of Mind (ToM) is central to the development of plot, character, and theme in Hawthorne’s absorbing narrative. The story showcases everyday reliance on ToM,
How Hawthorne loads his story with such power is worthy of some closer analysis, but before we get there, you can read ‘Young Goodman Brown’ here. Let’s begin with a summary of the story’s plot. We have analysed the story’s symbolism in a separate post.
Hawthorn’s The Scarlet Letter has been marked by the proliferation of symbolic elements. Underlying these symbols is an array of themes – love, justice, grace, tragedy, vengeance, pain and suffering, just to name a few. This study has the task of examining its major symbols.
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Dec 9, 2020 · Hawthorne’s authorial gestures in “The Birth-mark” and “Rappaccini’s Daughter” oppose the traditional notion of ethereal humanity and proffer a totally different concept of life as a material entity.