"Puritan dilemma" Essays and Research Papers

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    people the Separatist and the Congressionalist. In our readings it allowed us to compare two people with opposite viewpoints of how things should be done. When it came to the Puritan religion writers like Winthrop and Bradford laid down the foundation and introduced the two main opposing forces. Winthrop‚ a Congressionalist Puritan‚ grew up in a wealthy and educated town of Europe. He believed that he could go to the new world and fix the

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    Intolerance When Puritans arrived in America in 1620‚ they had experienced religious intolerance in the Old world‚ yet they still supported Europe’s theory that in order to have unity within a state‚ everyone must be of the same faith. Puritans believed in predestination‚ which meant that God had already decided which of his children would receive the privilege of going to heaven and which would not‚ and one could not persuade His judgment. This belief‚ along with the strict Puritan lifestyle‚ intertwined

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    to those leaving it to die on the scaffold. The rosebush by the window of the prison is wild. It symbolizes freedom from the confinement of society. These soft‚ red roses offer a small but bold contrast to the strict‚ black and white world of the puritans. The vibrant flowers give a splash of life to the monotonous‚ dreary scene | the letter “A” | Is placed on Hesters chest and is described in chapter 1 and 11 | A is the symbol of sin and punishment in the beginning society. She has a spirited soul

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    In The Scarlet Letter‚ the Puritans are a group who believe that people are born with sin. Subsequently‚ they keep a strict eye over their community as well as themselves. Correspondingly‚ depending on how severe a sin is‚ it may be punishable by death. Hester is spared by the Puritans because they believe that she will serve as a living sermon of sin. Hester must wear a scarlet letter on her chest for the entirety of her life to make up for her punishment. These events convey how the overall theme

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    in Groton‚ England in 1588 to Adam Winthrop and Anne Browne on a farm his father purchased from Henry VIII. He had many advantages because his father high social and economic positions at that time. While at Cambridge University he was exposed to puritan ideas and married his wife at the age of 17. Because of his education he wanted to reform the national church from within‚ by purging it from everything back to Rome. He wanted to change the hierarchy of the clergy and all the traditional rituals

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    Terms for Chapter 2 Sea Dogs-roving English ships that plundered Spanish treasure ships (1560s) St. Augustine–fort Spain created in Florida 1565 to protect the route of its treasure fleet against English ships‚ French settlers‚ hostile Indians (1st permanent Euro. settlement in US) Comprehensive Orders for New Discoveries-new policy Spanish leaders introduced after military setbacks to pacify Indians by Christianizing missionaries not conquistadores (1573) Ecomenderos-privelaged spanish landowners

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    The Scarlet Letter was a novel composed by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The events in the novel were dated back to the 17th century. The Massachusetts Bay Colony included the Puritans that were heavily influenced with the Church. With religion being their origin for both moral and government regulations‚ many things were outlawed. The Puritans obeyed strict standards and if anyone was to deviate from them‚ they were to be punished. Public humiliation and self-punishment were the common disciplines associated

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    Puritan society is a period of strict rules harsh punishment‚ and cruel judgment for those who do not follow societal guidelines. When Nathaniel Hawthorne penned The Scarlet Letter‚ he not only exposed the hypocrisy in the Puritan religion‚ but he revealed numerous psychological components. Within the lines of his novel‚ Hawthorne exposes what is perhaps Sigmund Freud’s most prominent theory‚ his take on personality. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter exposes Freud’s personality theory in providing

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    17th Century Massachusetts and the Salem Witch Trials In January of 1692‚ the daughter and niece of Reverend Samuel Parris became ill‚ and when the children’s health did not improve‚ the village doctor William Griggs was called in to help. He swiftly diagnosed the girls with bewitchment and the famous witch trials of Salem took off. Salem had recently had an epidemic of Small Pox and had always had a strong belief in the Devil. These two factors added with the constant fear of attack from warring

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    Massachusetts of 1692‚ their community is set as a theocratic society‚ where the church and the state come as one. Moral laws and state laws are also combined as one. Everyone is expected to live up to the established social norms. Any individual within the Puritan community whose private lives doesn’t conform to the moral laws established by the government is represented as a threat to the community and to the rule of God and true religion. In Salem‚ everything and everyone belongs to either God or the devil

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