Conformity In The Scarlet Letter Essay

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One of the most prominent debates throughout history is the question of individual versus group. Is it better to protect individual rights or sustain peace and safety in society? Is it better to be oneself, at all costs, or conform to the strict guidelines and rules set before each person by society? Conformity is fundamentally a failure to be one’s self and true to one’s nature. Non-conformists are those who rebel against the masses through their views and behaviour. In The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne constantly internally struggles with this debate on conformity. Often it seems she is willing to obey the masses, wear the letter, and settle for a life plagued with shame and guilt. Other times it seems Hester rejects society's rules as arbitrary …show more content…

The narrator notes her change in morals and beliefs: “She had wandered… much amiss” (180). This passage describes Hester’s state of mind and morals after seven years with the scarlet letter. Compared to Dimmesdale, Hester is much wilder, yet also much better adjusted to the weight of her guilt. She has accepted what happened and uses that acknowledgment to shape her views. She has become stronger, more untamed, and more removed from society. Not only does society reject her, but her crime forces her to question morals and dive into her wilder nature. Religion and law no longer work as simple guidelines for her life. Her act is considered a sin, but out of it she got freedom, love, and Pearl. After being cast out, she now looks at society and its rules—the things most people conform to—from a more negative, outsider perspective. The letter gives her a chance to be independent and find what she believes in as opposed to what she's been told to believe in. She rejects society through both these rebellious views, and also through her actions upon coming back to the community. She helps women in the community by offering support and counselling. In such a male dominated society, this is an important step both towards feminism and away from the

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