Boudreau notes some parallels between Nathaniel Hawthorne's story about adultery in Puritan times, published in 1850, and the Cornell case. First, both Hawthorne's main character Hester Prynne and ...
NEW BEDFORD - A Massachusetts man turned a childhood fascination into what he says is the world's largest dollhouse shop. It even led to doing some work for Taylor Swift.
When Nathaniel Hawthorne published the novel on March 16, 1850, it was a juicy bestseller about an adulterous woman forced to ...
Nathaniel Hawthorne died in 1864, in the midst of the Civil War, a social revolution which he profoundly distrusted; he was traveling in New Hampshire for his health with his old college friend ...
There’s no scarlet letter on this historic stunner. 18 Chestnut Street in Salem is a six-bed, six-bath home where Nathaniel Hawthorne, author of legendary books like The Scarlet Letter and The ...
In the spring of 1853 Hawthorne received from his life-long friend, President Pierce, the appointment of United States Consul at Liverpool, then one of the most lucrative places in the gift of the ...
Members of Bowdoin College’s Class of 1825, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow created some of the most popular literary works in nineteenth-century America. In response to Hawthorne's ...
While overlooked, romantic comedies have produced some of Hollywood’s most daring, yet faithful retellings of classic ...
This essay contributes to the broader study of nineteenth-century sovereignty by analyzing a specific set of sovereigntist assumptions in Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1835 short story “Wakefield.” It reveals ...
The vibe at this year’s MLK Day keynote was the “fierce urgency of now,” as keynote speaker Erica Chenoweth and Bates President Garry W. Jenkins each reflected on the challenges and imperatives of ...
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