Book details
The Scarlet Letter
by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Austin Warren
1850
About the book
Set in seventeenth-century Puritan Boston, the narrative follows Hester Prynne, a woman forced to wear a scarlet "A" as a permanent mark of adultery after conceiving a child out of wedlock. While Hester endures public shaming and isolation on the outskirts of the colony, her anonymous lover, the minister Arthur Dimmesdale, suffers from private guilt and physical decline. Meanwhile, Hester's estranged husband, Roger Chillingworth, arrives under a false identity to seek psychological revenge against the man who fathered the child.
Readers interested in the intersection of legalism and morality study this book to understand the tension between institutional punishment and personal conscience. It appeals to those analyzing historical American social structures and the psychological effects of enforced secrecy. The reader walks away with a clear picture of how rigid communal standards can foster hypocrisy while private confession or public endurance shapes individual character. It provides a technical look at the transition from colonial religious law to internal moral accountability.
Details
- Published
- 1850
- Language
- EN