Hypocrisy is shaped at the start of this book by publicly shaming Hester for committing adultery. Most people within the period are very spiritual and it is learned at the book that everyone is the sinner and but God should be able to decide someone's fate, Hester is the one being punished in public for a sin she did out of love. The dress of people in this town is normally dark and gloomy but Hester does lovely embroidery that some rich class people in town wear; although these dresses are created by an outcast. The highest senior people in town do not appear to worry that they are needing and wearing dresses created by the individual most shunned at town.
In the Scarlet Letter, these ethical and cultural beliefs relating to the discrimination of females by community is revealed through the isolation of Hester Prynne, the main character in this Scarlet Letter. Within The red Letter, Hester is punished for her unfaithful relationship with Reverend Dimmesdale which results in one person named white. As the consequence of this unfaithful relation, that governments of this Puritan community that she is occupying at sentences her to have the red Letter on her chest that is said to stand for adulterer, stand on a scaffold in front of the entire community for public viewing of her Scarlet Letter and Pearl, and serve a prison sentence. But in actuality, Hester gets the life sentence, this isolation from society because of the Scarlet Letter and how the people look at adulterers. So she is far alienated because women were supposed to adapt to the world’s opinions on how they should act.
In the Scarlet Letter these individuals start by the family of Bellingham, Dimmsdale, and Chillingworth to some degree. It is these people that we find the biggest point of pretense, among the puritanical community. We may find that Governor Bellingham expects Hester to give a couple of embroidered white gloves, when it is said that earlier in this book that elaborate dress code was thought a sin by the Puritan society. If something is considered the sin, so why does its “ ethical label '' (i.e . Sin, not the sin) change as you go up through the societal hierarchy But the most evident kind of Hypocrisy is seen at Dimmsdale, the pastor was so considered as a very outstanding, even godlike member of society. But still he has been holding the worry of knowing he has committed adultery.
Hypocrisy is shaped at the start of this history by publicly shamming Hester for committing adultery. Most people within the period are really spiritual and it is learned at the book that everyone is the sinner and but God should be able to decide somebody, and even, Hester is the one being punished in public for a sin she did out of love. The dress of people in this town is normally dark and gloomy but Hester does lovely embroidery that some rich class people in town wear; although these dresses are created by an outcast. The highest senior people in town do not appear to worry that they are needing and wearing dresses created by the individual most shunned at town.
In the Scarlet Letter, these ethical and cultural beliefs relating to the discrimination of females by community is revealed through the isolation of Hester Prynne, the main character in this Scarlet Letter. Within The red Letter, Hester is punished for her unfaithful relationship with Reverend Dimmesdale which results in one person named white. As the consequence of this unfaithful relation, that governments of this Puritan community that she is occupying at sentences her to have the red Letter on her chest that is said to stand for adulterer, stand on a scaffold in front of the entire community for public viewing of her Scarlet Letter and Pearl, and serve a prison sentence. But in actuality, Hester gets the life sentence, this isolation from society because of the Scarlet Letter and how the people look at adulterers. So she is far alienated because women were supposed to adapt to the world’s opinions on how they should act.
In the Scarlet Letter these individuals start by the family of Bellingham, Dimmsdale, and Chillingworth to some degree. It is these people that we find the biggest point of pretense, among the puritanical community. We may find that Governor Bellingham expects Hester to give a couple of embroidered white gloves, when it is said that earlier in this book that elaborate dress code was thought a sin by the Puritan society. If something is considered the sin, so why does its “ ethical label '' (i.e . Sin, not the sin) change as you go up through the societal hierarchy But the most evident kind of Hypocrisy is seen at Dimmsdale, the pastor was so considered as a very outstanding, even godlike member of society. But still he has been holding the worry of knowing he has committed adultery.