The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析

上传人:飞*** 文档编号:35982042 上传时间:2018-03-23 格式:DOC 页数:20 大小:130KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析_第1页
第1页 / 共20页
The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析_第2页
第2页 / 共20页
The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析_第3页
第3页 / 共20页
The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析_第4页
第4页 / 共20页
The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析_第5页
第5页 / 共20页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《The_Scarlet_Letter《红字》作品分析(20页珍藏版)》请在金锄头文库上搜索。

1、The Scarlet LetterHistorical Context The Transcendentalist Movement The Scarlet Letter, which takes as its principal subject colonial seventeenth-century New England, was written and published in the middle of the nineteenth century. Hawthorne began writing the novel in 1849, after his dismissal fro

2、m the Custom-House, and it was published in 1850. The discrepancy between the time represented in the novel and the time of its production has often been a point of confusion to students. Because Hawthorne took an earlier time as his subject, the novel is considered a historical romance written in t

3、he midst of the American literary movement called transcendentalism (c. 1836-60). The principle writers of transcendentalism included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, and W. H. Channing. Transcendentalism was, broadly speaking, a reaction against the rationalism of the prev

4、ious century and the religious orthodoxy of Calvinist New England. Transcendentalism stressed the romantic tenets of mysticism, idealism, and individualism. In religious terms it saw God not as a distant and harsh authority, but as an essential aspect of the individual and the natural world, which w

5、ere themselves considered inseparable. Because of this profound unity of all matter, human and natural, knowledge of the world and its laws could be obtained through a kind of mystical rapture with the world. This type of experience was perhaps most famously explained in Emersons Nature, where he wr

6、ote, “I become a transparent eyeball; I am nothing; I see all; the currents of the Universal Being circulate through me; I am part and parcel of God.“ Even though Hawthorne was close to many transcendentalists, including Emerson, and even though he lived for a while at the transcendentalist experime

7、ntal community of Brook Farm, he was rather peripheral to the movement. Hawthorne even pokes fun at Brook Farm and his transcendentalist contemporaries in “The Custom-House,“ referring to them as his “dreamy brethren indulging in fantastic speculation.“ Where they saw the possibilities of achieving

8、knowledge through mystical experience, Hawthorne was far more skeptical. Abolitionism and Revolution More important to Hawthornes literary productions, and particularly The Scarlet Letter, was abolitionism and European revolution. These, in Hawthornes view, were episodes of threatening instability.

9、Abolitionism was the nineteenth-century movement to end slavery in the United States. Though it varied in intensity, abolitionism contained a very radical strain that helped to form a climate for John Browns capture of Harpers Ferry in 1859. (John Brown intended to establish a base for armed slave i

10、nsurrection.) The rising intensity and violence of abolitionism was an important cause of the Civil War. Hawthornes conservative position in relation to abolitionism did not necessarily mean that he was pro-slavery, but he did quite clearly oppose abolitionists, writing that slavery was “one of thos

11、e evils which divine Providence does not leave to be remedied by human contrivances.“ What Hawthorne feared were violent disruptions of the social order like those that were happening in Europe at the time he wrote The Scarlet Letter. The bloody social upheaval that most interested Americans began i

12、n France in 1848. This, and other revolutions of the period, pitted the lower and middle classes against established power and authority. While the revolutions eventually failed, they were largely waged under the banner of socialism, and it was this fact that caused concern in America; as one journa

13、list wrote, as quoted by Bercovitch, here there were “foreboding shadows“ of “Communism, Socialism, Pillage, Murder, Anarchy, and the Guillotine vs. Law and Order, Family and Property.“ Critics have recently pointed to Hawthornes guillotine imagery in “The Custom-House“ (where he even suggests the t

14、idle “The Posthumous Papers of a Decapitated Surveyor“ for his tale) and metaphors of his own victimization as some evidence of his sympathies with regard to revolution and social order. The Puritan Colonies The novel was written in the mid-nineteenth century, but it takes the mid-seventeenth centur

15、y for the events it describes (1642-49). The Massachusetts Bay Colony was established by John Winthorp (whose death is represented near the center of the novel) and other Puritans in 1630. They sought to establish an ideal community in America that could act as a model of influence for what they saw

16、 as a corrupt civil and religious order in England. This sense of mission was the center of their religious and social identity. Directed toward the realization of such an ideal, the Puritans required a strict moral regulation; anyone in the conmmunity who sinned threatened not only their soul, but the very possibility of civil and religious perfection in America and in England. Not coincidentally, the years Hawthorne chose to represent in The Scarle

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 商业/管理/HR > 企业文档

电脑版 |金锄头文库版权所有
经营许可证:蜀ICP备13022795号 | 川公网安备 51140202000112号