Scarlet Letter Pearl Feminist

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In The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, there are two strong female Characters Pearl and her mother, Hester. Pearl and Hester are being punished for the crime/sin that Hester committed, she committed the sin of adultery with the reverend after her husband was perceived to be dead. Hester's punishment for the crime was to wear a scarlet A on her bosom for the rest of her life or until she revealed who she had committed adultery with. Pearls punishment is living with the fact that she is the product of sin and that none of the townspeople are willing to talk to her for the fear of evil. The townspeople constantly mock pearl by calling her a “demon child”. The children in the town goes as far as to throw rocks at her. Pearl, being friendless, …show more content…

Feminist- someone who advocates for women's rights on the ground of political, social, and economic equality to men. Pearl did not necessarily do any of those things, but what she did do was not conform to what puritan society told her to do. An example of Pearl not conforming to society would be when Pearl was talking about the meeting she, her mother, and her father had.“Mother, said Pearl, was that the same minister that kissed me by the brook? Hold thy peace, dear little Pearl!" whispered her mother. "We must not always talk in the marketplace of what happens to us in the forest”( Hawthorne ). This is a good example of Pearl not conforming because after all she went threw and being told what she can or cannot do she still chooses to do what she wants …show more content…

She symbolized many things in the novel which include sin and beauty. Hester often said that Pearl was her own special treasure and the only good thing that came out of the sin, and an example of that would be “But she named the infant ‘Pearl’ as being of great price,--purchased with all she had,--her mother’s only treasure!” (Hawthorne 168). Pearl also symbolizes sin and was often sought to be evil by the townspeople. “So Pearl-- the elf-child, --the demon offspring, as some people, up to that epoch, persisted in considering her,--became the richest heiress of her day, in the New World (Hawthorne 495). This is a quote from the end of the book after Chillingworth had died and left her everything had, and it is stating that even after she went from the bottom to the top people still considerd her a “demon child”. Pearl’s symbols change throughout the novel beginning with, sin and adultery, then truth, and finally, hope. These symbols are the most important in the

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