Hawthorne Publishes The Scarlet Letter: Sin and Guilt Exposed
Nathaniel Hawthorne published The Scarlet Letter on March 16, 1850, a novel set in seventeenth-century Puritan Boston that explored the corrosive effects of secret sin, public shame, and moral hypocrisy. The first printing of 2,500 copies sold out within ten days. Hester Prynne, forced to wear a scarlet 'A' for adultery, became one of American literature's most enduring characters, a woman who transforms her punishment into a badge of strength while the community that condemned her harbors far darker secrets. Hawthorne drew on his own ancestral guilt: his great-great-grandfather John Hathorne had been a judge during the Salem witch trials, and Hawthorne added the 'w' to his surname to distance himself from the family shame. The novel established Hawthorne as America's foremost writer on the tension between individual conscience and communal judgment, themes that defined the American literary tradition from Melville through Faulkner.
March 16, 1850
176 years ago
Key Figures & Places
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