Bathmark and Hawthorn's Loneliness / Isolation Nasaniel Hawthorne's story "The Bathmark" feels like seeing Elmer's solitary / solitary scientist in his laboratory; totally different from Aminadab In the laboratory apartment, he lives alone in the room outside the laboratory. These lonely examples do not reflect the life of the author. Introduction by Hawthorne by A. N. Kaul - In the topic of criticism and essay, the theme of isolation and alienation is the theme of "focusing deeply" in Hawthorne's writings (2).
Most readers may see the name "Nathaniel Hawthorne" from his novels, but the most famous is Scarlett's letter, but Hawthorne is also a fanatic of short stories including what I do here discussed here Things: birth points. In The Birthmark, Hawthorne talks about a couple dealing with a perfect struggle and a scientific battle between humans and death. At the beginning of the story, the couple talked about the birthplace of Georgina, the birthplace in the shape of a small hand remaining on her cheeks, and if Almar tried to remove it, it was regarded as her only external embarrassment. This story tells the effort to erase Armor's birth birth - to make Georgina a member of the gods
"Birth mark just born" is a short story written by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Among them, Georgina husband Elmer told her she would be perfect unless it was a landmark of her face. Elmer did a variety of experiments until someone who finds Georgina's birth disappears. He gave her a cure and successfully deleted the birth mark but in the process he killed her. After reading the end of a short story I began to wonder if this story reflects scientific experiments that were wrong or caused death.
Does Hawthorne's "born birthmarks" related to today's science? Did you have any recent scientific experiments to die?
In order to start the analysis, I chose a key phrase from Nathaniel Hawthorne's 19th century short story "The Birthmark". In "The Mark", the hero's alemer is obsessed with his wife's imperfection, her cheek mark. He is a born philosopher and tries to remove the birthmark from her cheek, which causes his wife to lose his life. The whole short story has many symbolic representations of social norms and standards of beauty in this era. At the beginning of the story, Elmer clearly shows that his wife's cheek mark is her complete and beautiful destruction. Reflecting on this attitude, the phrase reflecting the theme of the story is actually a story of Elmer's idea and I am reading it. (Hawthorne 345)