Nathaniel Hawthorne
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Nathaniel Hawthorne
1. The text belongs to the tradition of American romance, so technically it is not a novel.
Like with Cooper, the romance is a distinct mode of representation: liberal treatment
of historical sources, fantastic and Gothic elements (characters, settings, plots).
Hawthorne, additionally, introduces a variety of symbolic and allegorical elements.
2. Hawthorne and Melville knew the allegorical literature of English Renaissance, e.g.
Chaucer’s House of Life and Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene. Both authors
acknowledged these works as influences. And, of course, they knew allegorical
exegesis of the Bible from tracts and sermons. This invites many intertextual readings
of The Scarlet Letter and Moby Dick, e.g. David Reynolds’s Beneath the American
Renaissance (1988), a survey of 19th-century pop intertexts.
5. The visual prominence of symbol and allegory also have a bearing on the text: flat
characters, simple plot (in the technical meaning), action as progression of allegorical
scenes, wealth of descriptions. For speculations about continuity of this mode of
representation in American fiction: Joel Porte, The American Romance. Continuers
include Herman Melville (a biographically confirmed case), Henry James, Stephen
Crane, William Faulkner, John Barth, Thomas Pynchon, and Toni Morrison.
Notes from reception and criticism:
The Scarlet Letter is a psychological romance. The hardiest of Mr Malaprop would never call
it s novel. It is a tale of remorse, a study of character in which the human heart is anatomized,
carefully, elaborately, and with a striking poetic and dramatic power.
Everet A. Duyknick, review in the NY Literary World, 1850.
It is upon her guilty lover that the author projects most frequently the cold, thin rays of his
fitfully-moving lantern, which makes here and there a little luminous circle, on the edge of
which hovers the vivid and sinister figure of her retributive husband.
Henry James, “The Three American Novelists”, 1875.
Hart also includes fragment of a letter from Nathaniel Hawthorne to Sophia Peabody:
Thou only hast revealed me to myself; for without any aid, my best knowledge of myself would
be merely to have known my own shadow. Indeed we are but shadows (…) till the heart is
touched. The touch creates us.
(With reference to the abundant visual imagery in H’s fiction, and numerous, long scenes of
watching and being watched. H and his characters want to touch instead, intersubjective
contact initiates creation of personality etc. Beginning with the 1970s, this spurred a number
of philosophical readings along the more ‘touching’ lines in hermeneutics and
phenomenology, such as Husserl, Buber, Levinas, and Heidegger.)