Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  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. Feb 25, 2023 · Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in 1804 to Nathaniel Hawthorne, Senior and Elizabeth Manning Hawthorne. His father was a sea-captain who died in 1808 of yellow fever. Hawthorne’s mother then moved with her children to her family’s home in Salem. Her family had a long history in Salem, and among Harthorne’s ancestor was a judge in the Salem ...

  3. In 1860, Hawthorne and his family returned to their home, The Wayside, in Concord. In “Chiefly About War Matters” (1862), he deplored the violence of the Civil War and its terrible transformative effects on America, both the North and South. Even then, he was still using his writing to explore the complexities of the human heart.

  4. Oct 25, 2024 · Accessed 11 November 2024. Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–64) is one of the greatest fiction writers of 19th-century America. A novelist and short-story writer, he was a master of the allegorical and symbolic tale. Hawthorne is best known for the novels The Scarlet Letter (1850) and The House of the Seven Gables (1851).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. This 1630s reality in New England, particularly across several Massachusetts colonies, becomes the basis for the zeitgeist portrayed in ‘ The Scarlet Letter ’ by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Salem, one of the colonies, is at its puritan heights when Hester Prynne falls short of the sin of adultery, one of the most deplorable moral crimes of the time.

  6. 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 ...

  7. People also ask

  8. One of those contemporaries in the United States – Nathaniel Hawthorne, who had just published A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys (1852) – had already identified the crucial role of fancy in nationalism in such 1830s stories as “The Gray Champion” and “Legends of the Province- House.”. But Hawthorne from the start saw nationalism not ...