As Susanna Rosen looks like Charlotte in Charlotte Temple, in "Red Letter" Nathaniel Hawthorne is centering on Hester Prynne as the story. The plot in the book is centered on these women; the story sometimes moves to other places to inform readers of other character events, but always returns to each heroine. The authors use their main women for different themes they offer, but Susanna Rowson uses Charlotte Temple as a role model for readers.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's unique "red letter" is usually in a society where people are criticized, punished and despised against personal choices and flaws. Author Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Hester Prynne in the novel "The Scarlet Letter" to symbolize that people who challenge social integration benefit society as a whole. She was banished for adultery but she believes that the community needs her. Through her bold novel "Red Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, it develops around sin and punishment. The protagonist of this novel is quite contrastive on how to respond to crime. Dimmesdale's immediate reaction to crime is to tell a lie. Before he was in Hester and other parts of the town, he continued to provide a speech on how she is most interested in her and her father.
"Red Letter" reveals moral and social values related to social discrimination against women through alienation of Hester Prynne, the main character of "Red Letter". In the "red letter", Hester was punished for an affair relationship with Pastor Din Mesdale, and a child named Pearl was born. For adultery, the social authority of Puritan she lived was accused of wearing a red letter on her chest. However, in fact, Hester has life imprisonment, and more content is displayed in alienation with ....