- man vs. self
- Dimmesdale vs. guilt
- Hester vs. guilt
- Hester vs. temptation
- Chillingworth vs. manhood (ugly/cheated on/outcast)
- man vs. society
- Hester vs. Puritan "gossip"
- Dimmesdale vs. "reputation"
- Pearl vs. "elf-child"
- man vs. man
- Dimmesdale vs. Chillingworth (revenge/truth/Hester)
- witch vs. Hester (soul/evil)
- Black Man vs. Chil/Hest/Dim
- Hester vs. Pearl (behavior/truth)
From our list, there are various antagonists and protagonists in the novel depending on which conflict a reader focuses on. Therefore, we charted the "good" vs. "bad" traits of each; our findings are listed below (more points=more good):
-.5 Chillingworth 0 Pearl 1.5 Dimmesdale 2 Hester
Also, great job using higher thinking skills today, English 3 Honors! NPR's radio broadcast on Hester as the first female American archetype was of college-level thinking. Here is the transcript of the broadcast. Plan to do more with non-fiction literary analysis as you continue this year and through the rest of your educational career.