Martha Stewart Analysis

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CREATIVE TITLE As time passes, what society deems acceptable changes and what the word “scandal” encompasses can vary based on the generation of people you ask. While the Lewinsky scandal in may have stunned the world in 1988, it is only recently that South Korea legalized adultery; in a time span as short as two decades, what was once a scandalous crime worth impeaching a president went to being tolerated. Nonetheless, scandals have been depicted in literary works throughout the ages, one of the most famous examples being the affair of Hester Prynne in The Scarlet Letter. Though this narrative dates to the 1800’s, similarities can be drawn between Hester and the scandals of central figures in today’s world. Martha Stewart, for instance, was …show more content…

Both women fall to the lowest ranks of society as a result of their scandals. Hester, who tries to help out the poor during her period of ignominy, had “the poor…whom she sought out to be the objects of her bounty, often [revile] the hand that [she] stretched forth to succor them” (Hawthorne 75). Hester occupies the lowest rank in society at this point in the story, even with the poor looking down upon her, despite her attempts to help them. Martha Stewart also claims the scandal she had put her in a “deep hole” that “was not a pleasant hole;” she further curses at those who pitied her and told her at this point in her life, “Oh, whatever happens to you, it will make you stronger.” (Rothman) Similar to Hester, Martha occupies a rank in society where she is low in society and has the public looking down upon them during the lowest points in their lives. However, with time the tarnished images of these two begin to repair themselves. In time, the Puritan community Hester was living will remark of her, “Do you see that woman with the embroidered badge…It is our Hester–the town’s own Hester–who is so kind to the poor, so helpful to the sick, so comforting to the afflicted!” (Hawthorne 146). With time, same acts of Hester, which were begrudgingly accepted earlier in the novel, become appreciated by her townspeople as time passes. When Stewart emerged from jail, after leaving …show more content…

In both scenarios, there are men who are equally guilty as these two, but the women bear more public attention. With Hester’s crime being adultery, the man she was with, Dimmesdale, is equally guilty as her; however, society only punishes Hester for her crime. Even after Dimmesdale comes forth and confesses his sin and dies, some said he had “made the manner of his death a parable, in order to impress on his admirers…we are sinners all alike” (Hawthorne 236). Despite his admitting himself as guilty as Hester, Dimmesdale is still revered in the community, while Hester has to carry all the public shame for a crime they both committed. Martha Stewart was not alone in her insider trading scandal either, with much less publicized cases going on around the same time as hers; Mark Swartz and Dennis Kozlowski, for example, “were convicted of cheating Tyco out of $600 million” and “misconduct at Worldcom and Enron cost investors billions and lost thousands of employees their jobs” (Baykal, McAlister, and Sawayda 5). In both these cases, there are people more deserving for shaming instead of these two ladies, but both their societies chose to chastise them. The severity of these two scandals is not as great compared to other crimes being committed, but are more publicized. After Hester and Dimmesdale’s sin of adultery came Chillingworth’s sin

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