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American Literature: The Scarlet Letter 13081 Views


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Description:

Let's dive into Nathaniel Hawthorne' The Scarlet Letter, and analyze it from A-Z. Well, actually, we're only going to focus on the first few chapters, so it's more like we're gonna analyze just the "A" part. (See what we did there?)

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

The Scarlet Letter.....

00:19

Hi I'm the tangerine letter okay so my cousin, the [Tangerine letter appears]

00:23

Scarlet Letter gets better press I'm just the guy from the shmoop logo not as

00:27

scandalous so what was so scandalous about Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet

00:32

Letter like this thing has been banned from a ton of schools what did it do [Scarlet letter stamped with banned]

00:36

kill someone embezzle money blaspheme the Pope getting warmer...to discover what got

00:41

people so up in arms about this book let's start by learning a little about [Letter S walking along street]

00:45

the plot and characters quick and dirty summary here we go

00:48

caution spoiler alert we're in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the mid 17th

00:53

century we meet our heroine very early Hester Prynne and she's in jail who [Hester in a jail cell]

00:59

already with the injury why well she's an adulteress ie she got married but

01:03

chose not to take that whole love forsaking all others thing too seriously

01:06

ah adultery it's starting to become clear why some parents didn't want their [Girl reading book and parent takes book away]

01:11

kids reading this book so yeah Hester's a cheater allegedly and as tradition

01:15

would have it in Hester's time and place she's paraded around town as punishment

01:19

with a scarlet letter A, emblazoned on her clothing

01:23

yeah A, adulteress it's not A for ambitious or analytical or ankle-biter [Baby biting an ankle]

01:28

how'd she got caught you asked well she's got a baby daughter Pearl but her

01:33

husband's been gone for two years unfortunately her fellow townspeople

01:37

were pretty good at math well Hester's determined not to drag Pearls dad down

01:41

with her though so she refuses to name him, good thing too

01:44

because Esther's hubby Roger Chillingworth killer name shows up and [Roger appears beside Hester]

01:49

vows to enact revenge on this mystery lover while he concludes that this

01:54

mystery guy is the Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale so he starts to stalk the guy [Roger appears from Bush as Arthur walks by]

01:59

creepy when Hester catches wise to Rogers behavior she and the Reverend

02:03

come up with a plan to escape from everyone's prying judgey eyes and run

02:08

off to England because you know adultery is totally cool in England it's not cool

02:12

there but the Reverend gets cold feet

02:15

he gets stricken with a case of Christian guilt confesses his sin to the [Reverend in bed]

02:18

town shows everyone that he's got a scarlet letter of his own burned into

02:22

his chest and then dies from guilt powerful stuff that guilt a year later

02:27

he leaves everything to Pearl now flush with cash Hester and Pearl are [Hester carrying piles of cash and Pearl]

02:31

splitsville from the town not from each other Hester's gone for a while but

02:35

returns years later without pearl nobody knows if the girls even alive or not

02:40

they're not sure why Hester came back either unless she just really felt New

02:44

England with her home or the guilt monster finally got to her Hester dies [Hesters gravestone appears with A emblazoned on it]

02:48

and is buried near the Reverend her gravestone has a scarlet A on it because

02:53

symbolism so there's your story but isn't this story supposed to be in the

02:57

gothic Romantic genre well quick refresher on what Gothic Romanticism

03:01

usually entails remember dreary spooky settings mysterious and supernatural

03:06

elements an element of evil yeah so where is all that stuff more prevalent

03:11

than you might think let's break it down dreary spooky setting well it's not a [Dreary, spooky setting sign appears]

03:15

old rotting cottage in a dark swamp but Hawthorne definitely wanted to paint a

03:21

bleak and dismal picture of New England not a lot of scenes of merry-go-rounds at circus...

03:25

jails, execution, scaffolds, dark roads with creepy people hanging around

03:29

and leering at our protagonist yep check check check so the setting seems to mark

03:33

all our boxes there's also an element of the mystery is Hester really guilty of

03:38

adultery who's the real father how did that Scarlett A show up on the

03:42

reverend's chest when Hester returned from England is

03:44

Pearl still alive so yeah it kind of keeps you guessing as for the [Reverend with A on his chest appears]

03:49

supernatural how did that A get on the Reverend chest did he feel so bad about

03:53

his role in Hester's persecution that he branded himself? Did his guilt eat away at

03:58

him until it physically manifested into a physical sign of his transgression or [A appears on Arthurs chest]

04:02

did he just fall asleep on top of the smoldering campfire and there's an

04:06

element of evil in the creeptastic Roger Chillingworth and in the hordes of [Roger appears from a bush]

04:10

people who subject Hester to such awful public ridicule okay so definitely

04:15

gothic romantic with that business out of the way let's read a bit of this

04:19

thing and analyze four characters and their development hypocrisy sin and

04:24

religious beliefs shame guilt and blame women issues and connections between

04:30

characters in the novel and Puritans so keep all those in mind as you read

04:34

chapters 1 through 3 they're short chapters so it won't kill you....

04:38

fewer than 300 people died last year from reading the chapters......Done

04:43

with the first three excellent okay I'll start by looking at characters and their [Characters and their development highlighted on checklist]

04:47

development well we've got Hester Prynne of course and her three-month-old

04:50

daughter pearl and the chatty gossipy townspeople and finally Reverend

04:54

Dimmesdale who grills Hester about the identity of pearls father which is weird [Arthur asking who the Father is to Hester]

04:59

since he's the Father he is urged to speak by one of his

05:02

fellow clergymen but well you know still guess he just wants her to admit it [John Wilson slaps Arthur in church]

05:07

publicly hmm it's kind of like when you pulled off the perfect jewel heist and

05:10

you know you'll go to jail if anyone finds out but man what a good jewel

05:14

heist it was pearl is three so we don't expect a lot of character development

05:18

out of her and the townspeople are periphery characters so they don't play

05:22

a major role in the story but since Hester and the Reverend are two of our [Hester and Reverend standing on a boat]

05:25

main characters we'd expect to see them change throughout the book granted we're only

05:29

looking at first three chapters here so these pages are more about establishing

05:32

who they are at the beginning of the story rather than revealing any

05:35

substantial development that said we do still see Hester when she first sees the [People chanting against Hester]

05:40

crowd.....devoid of emotion all that inner turmoil is staying uh you

05:46

know inner but when the Reverend asked her to reveal the father's name she

05:49

stares straight at him and says I'm talking about her Scarlet Letter....

06:01

Hawthorne also informed us that she turns pale as death so we see that [Hester looking sad]

06:05

this whole experience is not easy for her you're trying to stay strong but

06:09

she's starting to break well we see some hints that the Reverend is having a

06:12

tough time of it to make sense you know knowing whatever you know as he implores

06:17

Hester to spill her guts his voice is described as sweet rich

06:21

deep and broken why deep and broken well seems like he might have some skin in [Letter S discussing Reverends voice]

06:26

the game and then when Hester refuses he draws back with a long respiration like

06:32

a sigh of relief his inner dialogue here might be along lines of she's not giving

06:38

me up thank the good Lord and baby Jesus what do we see here in the way of

06:42

hypocrisy well let's go right back to the Reverend railing on Hester he's

06:46

basically encouraging her to unburden her soul everyone knows she did this bad

06:51

bad thing but well he does the same bad bad thing so uh why doesn't he practice [Hester appears in bed with a sleeping man]

06:56

what he literally preaches why isn't the Reverend announcing to town that he had

07:00

something to do with that little girl up there on the pillary... [Arthur and John standing together]

07:04

definitely be some hypocrisy there then again maybe he's just respecting

07:08

Hester's wish that the baby's father remain anonymous what do you think

07:12

should we give him the benefit of the doubt here hmm okay moving on sin and

07:16

religious belief well sin is pretty much represented by Hester herself and

07:20

religious belief can be seen in everybody else townspeople, the

07:23

clergyman even Hester herself who knows she isn't innocent [Hester lying next to man in bed]

07:26

in fact she even accentuates The Scarlet Letter she's forced to wear on the

07:31

bodice of her gown by stitching little flourishes on to it to draw even more

07:35

attention to the letter she's clearly feeling so guilty that she wants to [Hester holding the letter A in a jail cell]

07:39

serve her penance she could have tried to hide or disguise the letter but nope

07:43

she wants everyone to see it try and purge her soul of this awful thing she's

07:47

done how religious is this town well when Hester has spoken to it's not by

07:52

any policeman or judges or politicians it's by the clergy it's God who runs

07:58

this town and all these people feel as if they're just there to do his bidding [People sitting in a church]

08:02

and see that his justice is carried out well we've already touched on shame

08:05

guilt and blame... Hester and the Reverend both feel all three but they

08:10

take it entirely on themselves Hester isn't blaming Dimmesdale & Dimmesdale isn't

08:14

blaming Hester because they're both so devoted to their religion they've

08:17

accepted the fact that it was on them not to break God's rules nobody forced

08:21

them to bump uglies and because they can't come right out and get stuff off [Hester with x-ray image of chest appears and image turns to letter A]

08:26

their chests all that shame and guilt is bubbling and boiling right behind the

08:29

surface wreaking more havoc on their souls than it might if you know they'd

08:33

have freedom to clear the air well how are women portrayed in these first

08:36

chapters now there clearly doesn't appear to be a raging wave of feminism

08:39

here people it's clear that the women of the Massachusetts Bay Colony are given

08:45

some strict rules of conduct and when they break those rules they pay a heavy [Hester locked into stocks]

08:48

price like yeah adultery is a big one but we get the sense that even if Hester

08:52

had just shoplifted a honey baked ham she might be undergoing a similar ordeal

08:57

or worse, but at the same time we see Hawthornes portrayal of

09:00

women's strength and power first of all the other women in the town [Women with torches walking through town]

09:04

aren't just keeping quiet and letting the men do the taunting they seem to be

09:07

giving Hester more abuse than anyone else these are some strong-minded gals and

09:11

their passions about their beliefs in their letting her have it and there's Hester

09:15

strength this whole situation is clearly eating her up inside but on the surface

09:19

she's a model of fortitude the way she holds and conducts herself she could [Hester wearing a tiara]

09:23

almost be a queen strolling through town collecting adulation rather than a

09:27

prisoner being put on display for her crime...Well, finally what connections do we

09:31

see between the characters in the novel and Puritans pretty easy one here the

09:35

characters in the novel are Puritans the first Puritans came to America in the

09:39

early 1600s but it was in the second wave of the Puritans that came over in the 1630s

09:42

who settled in the present-day Boston and named their little patch of land the [Boston appears on olden map]

09:47

Massachusetts Bay Colony so if it feels like these folks are uber religious if

09:51

the culture seems a little oppressive and unrelenting if everyone seems stern

09:55

and serious all the time well there's good reason for that

09:58

the Puritans were basically an entire group of people every one of whom is

10:03

that strict hard-nosed parent who doesn't let you get away with anything [Boy bouncing in a bedroom and mother appears]

10:07

why did Hawthorne decide to make his characters Puritans well for one thing

10:11

it's what he knew his ancestors were Puritans and he felt a definite bond [Puritan ancestors by the ocean]

10:15

with them, even if he didn't agree with everything they stood for but second it

10:19

upped the emotional ante in the story adultery isn't something that's

10:23

applauded in any society but in a society where even the slightest moral [Man stood beside a no loitering sign]

10:27

misstep is treated very harshly and it's mighty powerful to see how the towns

10:32

people react when someone messes up big time well not to mention how much harder

10:36

the guilt strikes those directly involved so yeah that was just first

10:40

three chapters it's one thing to analyze the set up of the story but all the

10:44

juice and meat, all that delicious stuff comes later try reading chapters

10:48

23-24 the last two chapters and see how things have evolved over the course of

10:52

the characters respective journeys like we did for the early chapters analyze

10:56

for characters and their development hypocrisy, sin [Checklist appears]

11:00

and religious beliefs, shame guilt and blame, women's issues and connections

11:05

between characters in the novel and Puritans you need help just you know

11:09

give me a shout remember the S stands for sinful or samurai or a mini Scarface

11:15

let's just say it stands for someone special [Person photographs letter S in a field]

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