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Individualism In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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Young Goodman Brown has many aspects that correlate with Romanticism. The story does a good job of foreshadowing and connecting deeper meanings to its core. But it does an even better job of fleshing out its characters and leading the audience to the right place. Romanticism occurs in the forms of emotion, individualism, and overall imagination which all refer to Romanticism’s tradition. Emotion is a very necessary plot device in this story and furthers its essence into Romanticism. Expressing emotion is very useful but also very difficult especially when one tries to show not tell the reader. Nathaniel Hawthorne conveys these emotions through words with connotations that fit the scene. This works effectively throughout the story examples …show more content…
This is a very real and believable feeling for him to have and falls under the realm of Romanticism.
The second trait of Romanticism that Nathaniel Hawthorne does an amazing job of expressing is the emphasis on an individual's traits. He shows individualism through having the story based on one person. Hawthorne writes in Young Goodman Brown about a man who must go through trials and struggles to adapt to the expanding world around him. This shows Individualism because the story is faced on one person and his struggles instead of focusing on multiple persons. Individualism and the expression of feelings and emotion are expressed in the story of Young Goodman Brown.
This story is a contrast between imagination and reality. The antagonist in it is the devil, the spirit resembling his father, although the antagonist could also be Brown’s destructive sense of guilt. The projection of his own sinfulness upon others and his consequent damnation of them. The central conflict of the story is within Brown himself: an inner war of love and trust versus suspicion and distrust. This opens up a lot of doors to infer what is actually going on in Brown’s

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