The relationship between nature 's natural concept and its gender Jewett ^ s' s story "White Heron". Beginning with the first step of a new settler in the continent of America, its undeveloped nature is full of forest smell, air freshness, and nearly pre-lapse. Various animals and plants associated with infinite wilderness.
Jewett was born in Dorcas Doyen, Temple, Maine, and became a working-class family. Her father is alcoholic, and when she was young, her mother died. From the age of 12 or 13, the Jews were appointed as girls of servants in the house of the main court Nathan Weeston Court of Justice. So, she was confident in sexuality and grew to be a young woman who left the Weston for the first time at the age of 18. She moved to Maine State Portland where she worked as a prostitute under the name of a pseudonym. Later she moved to Boston with a series of pseudonyms and finally moved to New York.
In 1999 the center of the book "Helen Jewett Hell" by Patricia Cline Cohen is Dorcas Doyen, well known as Helen Jewett. It is well known that Doyen or Jewett was born in Maine Temple on 18 October 1883. It is a family of a working class. Her mother passed away as a child, her father died soon after alcoholism. She became an orphan at an early age, was adopted by a local judge, Nathan Weston and his family, and received a good education (Cohen, 23). She is also a servant of the judge's house, where she grew to be a young lady known for its beauty. At this point she is said to have formed sexual confidence and there is a rumor that she is involved in shameful things with bankers. At the age of 18, the girl left the judge's house and began working as a pseudonym in Portland, Maine as in those days.
An important theme in Cohen's book is how the jewelry case reveals the changing nature of the newspapers of the 1930s. Cohen believes that the Jewett case emphasizes the transition between old format journalism and the new format dominated by penny news. Between the killing of Jewett and the report of Robinson's trial, a new form of journalist appeared. Editor James Gordon Bennett of New York Herald took the first step in research journalism by actually visiting crime scenes and collecting evidence of Jewish hesitation and direct evidence.