Criticism > Short Story Criticism > The Minister's Black Veil, Nathaniel Hawthorne - E. Earle Stibitz (essay date 1962)
The Minister's Black Veil, Nathaniel Hawthorne - E. Earle Stibitz (essay date 1962)
E. Earle Stibitz (essay date 1962)
SOURCE: “Ironic Unity in Hawthorne's ‘The Minister's Black Veil,’” in American Literature, Vol. 34, No. 2, May, 1962, pp. 182-90.
[In the following essay, Stibitz maintains that Hawthorne used irony in his portrayal of the minister's decision to wear the black veil.]
Because Hawthorne is always very much the same and yet also surprisingly varied, one way of understanding “The Minister's Black Veil,” as with any Hawthorne tale, is to read it not only as the unique work of art that it is, but as a tale comparable to others by Hawthorne, viewing it in the context of his essentially consistent thought and art as a whole. Such a reading of “The Minister's Black Veil” yields an unambiguous meaning. Hawthorne, with his usual assumption of the reality of personal evil, presents on one level his fundamental belief in man's proneness to hide or rationalize his most private thoughts or guilt. This...
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Criticism
- Richard Harter Fogle (essay date 1948)
- William Bysshe Stein (essay date 1955)
- Thomas F. Walsh (essay date 1959)
- E. Earle Stibitz (essay date 1962)
- Nicholas Canaday, Jr. (essay date 1967)
- W. B. Carnochan (essay date 1969)
- Robert E. Morsberger (essay date 1973)
- James Quinn and Ross Baldessarini (essay date 1974)
- Glenn C. Altschuler (essay date 1974)
- James B. Reece (essay date 1975)
- Elaine Barry (essay date 1980)
- Rosemary Franklin (essay date 1985)
- Judy McCarthy (essay date 1987)
- Norman German (essay date 1988)
- William Freedman (essay date 1992)
- Samuel Coale (essay date 1993)
- David K. Danow (essay date 1997)
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