"Enlightenment of the birthmark" Essays and Research Papers

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    “The Artist of the Beautiful”‚ and “The Birthmark”. Hawthorne’s writings often reflected romantics’ beliefs in nature and contained his message about science and man’s quest for perfection. An example where these ideas are shown‚ are in Hawthorne’s short story “The Birthmark”. In this story‚ a scientist named Aylmer grows tired of his beautiful wife’s birthmark and asks her if she would remove it. Although his wife stated that she does not mind the birthmark‚ Aylmer obsessively detest it to a point

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    to write a warning. In “Sonnet-To Science” and “The Birthmark” Poe and Hawthorne state that perfection is something that scientist seek for although it is something unachievable. In “To Astronomers” and “The Birthmark” Von Schiller and Hawthorne illustrate how scientists have an obsession with success which makes some of their scientific discoveries unreliable. They also illustrate how science was taking the beauty out of nature‚

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    The Birthmark analysis Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in Salem‚ Massachusetts in the year of 1804 and lived a long life until 1864. He studied at Bowdoin College. Throughout his lifetime Nathanial wrote many novels‚ short stories‚ etc. Some of his most famous ones being The Scarlet Letter (1850)‚ The House of the Seven Gables (1851) and the short story “The Birthmark.” “The Birthmark” is a story that has many different themes through the plot that revolve over one flaw. That being the Birthmark

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    The Birthmark shows allegory meaning the characters are symbols that represent something. For an example‚ Alymer is what a dependent mind might be and the dangers of scientists. He believes that the world is flawless; that everything is perfect. His obsession with perfection got worse when he married Georgina. The small birthmark on her cheek made Alymer so desperate to remove it. He thinks about it a lot‚ “With the morning twilight Aylmer opened his eyes upon his wife’s face and recognized the symbol

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    could offer. Aylmer‚ dearest Aylmer‚ I am dying!’” p.9 10. (R) When Aylmer gives her the drink‚ she drinks the potion and the mark fades‚ but she starts to fade with it too. The readers are left with the blunt reality that Aylmer rather removes the birthmark that could he wife’s death rather than obsessing over her beauty that other would love her to be their wife. Also the immorality of perfection leads to

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    Blind Pursuits Jules Zanger in her essay‚ speaking of the Unspeakable: Hawthorne’s "The Birthmark‚" talks about the different interpretations of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story “The Birthmark.” one of the interpretations she talks about “regards the mark on Georgiana Aylmer’s cheek as the external sign of her human [and] imperfect condition.”(Zanger‚ 364) She goes on to talk about Georgiana’s husband Aylmer who tried to remove the mark on her face because it kept her from being perfect

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    has become a classic archetype. The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne‚ follows this archetype. Although The Birthmark and Frankenstein are not identical both stories have similar archetypal characters and share similar themes of abused power and redemption. The Frankenstein archetype requires three types of characters: a obsessive‚ mad scientist‚ a pure kind feminine presents and a monster‚ both sympathetic and ruthless. Although the characters from the birthmark are not carbon copies of the characters

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    and self consciousness‚ making you live a better and happier life. A notorious example of this “ideal” image being portrayed in modern society is Heidi Montag‚ who arguably ruined herself by getting too much plastic surgery. In stark contrast‚ The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne presents a much different example of cosmetic change during the 1700s‚ and shows that the “ideal” image is not something from the modern world‚ but rather has been around for a long time. Dark romanticism‚ otherwise stated

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    John Locke and Isaac Newton were the major intellectual forerunners of the Enlightenment. Print culture was a culture in which books‚ journals‚ newspapers‚ and pamphlets had achieved a status of their own. The Enlightenment flourished in this. The most influential philosophe was Voltaire. He wrote Letters on the English. The book praised the virtues of the English‚ especially their religious liberty‚ and criticized the abuses of French society. Voltaire said Muhammad and Islam represented simply

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    the story of a scientist who is obsessed with the removal of his wife ’s birthmark‚ considering it a symbol of her human imperfection. "The Birth-mark" is possibly influenced by Hawthorne ’s times where science began to gain knowledge about our world and was considerably glorified‚ through scientific experiment‚ humankind can discover‚ know‚ and do just about anything. As the narrator explains‚ “In those days when

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