In "Red Letter", the alienation of the hero Hester Prynne in "Red Letter" reveals the moral and social values related to social discrimination against women. In the "red letter", Hester was punished for affair relations with the priest Din Mesdale, leading a child named Pearl. For adultery, the Puritan social authority she lived sinned to wear a red letter on her chest. However, in fact, Hester has life imprisonment, more content is displayed in alienation with ....
Hester separation and alienation in "red letter" In Nasaniel Hawthorne's "red letter", Hester Prine and Pastor Sistersdale promised adulade not in Puritan era. Accepted sin Because of their sins, children are born, mothers call pearls. Due to his own free will, Hester must face great punishment. - Samuel Becket is waiting for the humanity of God, alienation of truth, purpose, alienation of God, and alienation of each other. This is the theme of Samuel Beckett's play "Waiting for Goddy". Periodicity of play and sparse performance convey the sense of despair, that is, the sense that it is a willful world without God. Through absurd vocabulary, image, structure, opinion, lack of communication and reasons for human alienation are well proven.
The "red letter" symbol and setting also reflects isolation and alienation themes that prevent people from finding happiness and real salvation. Hester's red letter as a symbol reminds me of alienation with society. That is the brand that she is ashamed of her and her sins. As a representative of her and her society's representative (Puritan considers himself to be morally pure and kind), it segregates her from other people and makes her act accusing her of her behavior Increase discrepancies between. . The gorgeous embroidery and burning power that symbolizes the pain caused by the separation of Hester from society is an obstacle between Hester and other countries of the world. "Men wrote women's sins in red, this red letter has powerful and disastrous effect that no sympathy can reach her unless it is sinful like her" (Hawthorne 93). Guilt is publicly disclosed and another private disclosure is