Essay Comparing The Scarlet Letter And The Great Gatsby

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The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby Hawthorne and Fitzgerald, two great American romantics, display new attitudes towards nature, humanity, and society within their novels. The novels The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby are very similar with their adjacent themes, motifs, and symbols. The comparison between these two literary pieces show the transition from adultery to ability, societal standards during the chosen time periods, and good vs. evil. Hawthorne uses the scarlet letter “A” that Hester Prynne was required to wear as an inanimate symbol of her adultery. She had to bear the sin with her as long as she rested in that town. Pearl, Hester’s daughter from the affair, was the living, breathing symbol of her past sin. As many years …show more content…

Adultery was a terrible crime to them so Hester was to be publicly shamed for the rest of her life. They wanted to make a Utopian Society, perfect society, but this was to be impossible with all their punishment tactics. If they had what they wished for there would have been no scaffold, prison, or public shaming because there would have been no crime. The expectations of the town were appalling and Hawthorne truly wanted to expose the ugliness of Puritan societies. Women were also discriminated against in the novel The Great Gatsby. “I hope she’ll be a fool-that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool”(Fitzgerald, ch.1). Women were discriminated against in The Great Gatsby and were treated as if they were only suppose to be men’s trophies that were there to be shown off. Society also treated the people with more money better than the people who were poor and lived in poverty. Only wealthy people could go the large parties similar to the ones that Jay Gatsby held in his mansion. Good vs. evil also plays a big role in the comparison between Hawthorne and Fitzgerald’s

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