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Saturday, February 9, 2019

Free Essays: Symbolism in Hawthornes Young Goodman Brown :: Young Goodman Brown YGB

Nathaniel Hawthornes work is typically fraught with figureism, much of it etymologizing from his puritan ancestry. Hawthorne was obsessed with the themes of sin and guilt. John Roth notes that A number of recurring thematic patterns and character types appear in Hawthornes novels and tales (Roth 76). Because he is speaking of what we would later come to call the unconscious mind, Hawthorne extensively employed the use of symbolism, which bypasses the conscious to beleaguer into its more(prenominal) dream- like process below (Roth 76). In his short bosh Young Goodman Brown, the main character Goodman Brown goes off into the woods and undergoes what forget be a life changing experience. Young Goodman Brown, was written in the nineteenth century but is undoubtedly set in the seventeenth century, and for the early Americans in this time period the forest was a symbol of the test of strength, courage, and endurance. It took a lot of courage to survive there, and the puppyish som ebody entering the forest would not emerge the same. But the story is more symbolic than realistic, and the dangers that Goodman Brown encounters in the forest are not Indians or bears they are dangers of the spirit. It is no accident that such an experience should have interpreted place in the forest, because there is a long and extremely cloggy tradition in American literature where experiences of this nature haven taken place in forest settings. Psychologist Bruno Betelheim observes that Since ancient times the near big(p) forest in which we get lost has correspondd the dark, hidden near-impenetrable world of our unconscious (Betelheim, 94). However, this does not appear in Young Goodman Brown. Instead of bravely battling cut the dangers of the forest and emerging a more mature person, Goodman Brown emerges a ruined man. It should not go unrecognized that Goodman Browns wife, a light-hearted, genuine woman, has the cook Faith. Faith is not by any means an unusual piddle fo r a woman, especially in puritan times, but it becomes significant in the story because she is presented to us first as a very young bride with pink ribbons in her hair, almost like a child. Her pink ribbons symbolize her youth, and her name symbolizes her husbands childlike spirituality at the beginning of the story. Christianity historically has been a religion of obedience and devotion much more than one of logic, as much as the framers of the age of reason would try to argue otherwise.

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