Saturday, July 20, 2019
Hawthorne Writing Style :: essays papers
Hawthorne Writing Style    Nathaniel Hawthorne was a prominent early American Author who  contributed greatly to the evolution of modern American literature.  A  New England native, Hawthorne was born in Salem, Massachusetts on July  4, 1804 and died on May 19, 1864 in New Hampshire. An avid seaman,  Hawthorne^s father died in 1808 when Nathaniel Hawthorne was only a  young child.  After his father^s death, Hawthorne showed a keen  interest in his father^s worldwide nautical adventures and often read  the logbooks his father had compiled from sailing abroad.  Hawthorne  was a descendant of a long line of New England Puritans, which sparked  his interest in the Puritan way of life.  After he graduated from  Bowdoin College in 1825, Hawthorne returned to his home in Salem were  he began to write in semi-seclusion.  Hawthorne published his first  novel, Fanshawe in 1828.  In 1839, Hawthorne was appointed weigher and  gauger at the Boston Custom House.  He later married Sophia Amelia  Peabody in 1842.  In the following years, Hawthorne wrote his more  famous novels which shaped his own literary style, as well as the  genres of the romance novel and short story.  Eventually, Hawthorne  developed a style of romance fiction representative of his own  beliefs.  Although Nathaniel Hawthorne^s writing style was often viewed  as outdated when compared to modern literature, Hawthorne conveyed  modern themes of psychology and human nature through his crafty use of  allegory and symbolism.  To begin with, Hawthorne^s style was  commonplace for a writer of the nineteenth century.  During the time  period in which Hawthorne wrote, printing technology was not yet  advanced enough to easily reproduce photographs in books.  Therefore,  Hawthorne frequently wrote lengthy visual descriptions since his  audience had no other means to see the setting of the novel. (Magill:1  840). One example of such descriptions was in The Scarlet Letter when  Hawthorne intricately describes the prison door and its surroundings.    Another aspect of Hawthorne^s writing which was exclusive to his time  period was the use of formal dialogue which remained fairly consistent  from character to character (Magill:2 140).  Such overblown dialogue  was evident in The Scarlet Letter when the dialogue of Pearl, a young  child, exhibited no difference from the dialogue of the other  characters in the novel. Hawthorne adopted the use of overly formal  dialogue partly from a British writer, Sir Walter Scott, whose works  were popular in the United States and Great Britain (Magill:1 841).    Although Hawthorne^s dialogue was overly formal, it was an accurate  tool in describing human emotion (Gale).  Absence of character  confrontation was another component of Hawthorne^s literary style.  					    
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