Analysis of Scarlett’s Character in Gone with the Wind-对《飘》中斯佳丽的人物性格分析
【飘】女主人公形象分析(最后一次),云旭霞

高等教育自学考试毕业论文Analysis of Scarlett in Gone with the Wind《飘》中的女主人公形象分析云旭霞专业:英语语言主考学校:_西北师范大学________准考证号: 230107200155指导教师姓名职称:吴晓昱甘肃省高等教育自学考试办公室印制2013年10月1日论文摘要:纵观中西方文学作品,女性在求爱求生存的道路上,无不充满着艰辛,《飘》给我们展示了一个独立自主、坚强不屈的崭新的女性形象----斯嘉丽。
她勇敢坚强,在风雨飘摇的乱世,永不放弃对爱情的追求,对家园的保卫,对生活的渴望。
在追求爱情的漫长征程中,她保住了被战争摧毁的家园,摆脱了饥饿和贫穷,积累了财富。
在中国改革开放以来,社会同样发生了诸多变革,历史的车轮滚滚像向前,多少遗老遗少甘愿做“螳臂”挡车,因此解读斯嘉丽顺流而上,敢于创新,开拓进取的个性魅力,对我们的人生会产生深刻的启迪。
关键词:爱情;家园;永不言败;Analysis of Scarlett in Gone with the wind《Gone with the wind》is my favourit novel,The heroine Scarlett in this book is the daughter of a farmer .She is so differnt from a traditional Chinese woman that I have decided to write something about her .Scarlett is a figure with storng personality : she will never give up ,never desperate.I can`t help admire her .Admire her courage .So whenever I meet with difficulties ,whenever I had a bad mood ,I am moved by her .It`s not deniable that with the China`s entry into the WTO ,women are just like the deep-hidden treasure which has not been explored completely .They have the desire to be admitted by the society .But All these good wishes are not easy to accomplish.Maybe we should learn from her .No matter how difficult our life is ,Just face it optimistically.Key WordsIdeal woman ; succesful career ; never give up《飘》中女主人公的形象分析-------解读斯嘉丽永不言败的个性纵观中西方文学作品,女性在求爱求生存的道路上,无不充满着艰辛,《飘》给我们展示了一个独立自主、坚强不屈的崭新的女性形象,在重重失败面前,敢于担当,永不言败。
The Book Report of The Scarlet Letter(红字读书报告)

The Book Report of The Scarlet Letter---- The analysis of the main characters in The Scarlet Letter The Scarlet Letter as a masterpiece of Hawthorne, is a world-known tragic novel. The author adopts delicate description and profound psychological analysis portrays different characters vividly and deeply. It breaks the mold that American’s long-gestating novel is always fo llowing behind Western Europe’s.The social life in the early colonial period is very familiar to Hawthorne. Hence he is good at the portrayal of different kind of characters who were living under the rule of Puritans. And the novel is succeeded in shaping three types of people: Hester Prynne is a representative of ordinary women who were suffering persecution by the church. Being put in prison, publicly expose, put on scarlet letter, endless torments and humiliation stroke her religious belief and removed her hope for the church. At the beginning, what she wants to do is only to confess her sins. While she has no right to do that, which arouses her awareness of rebellion and resistance. We can see from the original work: ” But Hester Prynne, with a mind of native courage and activity, and for so long a period not merely separated, but outlawed, from society, had habituated herself to such latitude of speculation as was altogether foreign to the clergyman. The scarlet letter was her passport into regions where other women dared not tread. ” Therefore, she dare to motivate Dimmesdale to escape the secular society and pursuit their own life. Between the lines, we can see this woman’s process of convert clearly.Dimmesdale is a devout priest. And he is regarded as a real priest, a real religionist within the novel. However, he is quite different from Hester. If we use the words like kindness and rebellion to describe Hester Prynne, then we can use hesitation and timidity to depict the movements of Dimmes dale’s own mind. On the one hand, he is looking forward to having romantic love, while on the other hand, he hold the idea that he should not have any other intention except the strong belief of God. He can touch the sunshine and feel warm when Hester is accompanied with him. In the meantime, he is unwilling to leave God for a new life. As a devout priest, the barrier of belief is the biggest obstacle in his mind. There's often a tradeoff inside hisheart between the belief and love. He is tired of being hypocrisy, and dare not to disclose his own sins. When he had to sermonize his thoughts towards Hester when she was publicly exposed, he behaved as a hypocrite. Since he is in dilemma that he feels sorry for Hester and scares of being punished when his secret was disclosed by human beings.Dimmesdale and Hester are the main characters of this tragic love. What they suffered have unmasked the evil ruling of the church from two aspects. The suffering of Hester is an accusation against the draconian laws made by the church. And the result of death for Dimmesdale is a description of the cruel treatments of religious thoughts. It is naturally for Hester to have rebelled thoughts since she is subjected to abuse by all the village people. So there is no doubt that she rewarded the freedom in a certain degree. To the contrary, owing to his noble position, especially the strong belief to God, Dimmesdale is always the slave of religion. When Hester tried to persuade he to escape from this kind of Sodom, he was so excited once he heard the idea, while eventually he gave up the right for happiness for his fear of religion thoughts. From the point of his eyes, the behavior of escape is a matter that never can be absolved. As a matter of fact, although they escape from the cruel ruling of church, they cannot live in a happy life for the reason that he have no way to rid the religion thoughts of inwardly and ultimately.Chillingworth, as a hypocritical and cruel person ruling by the church in depth, he has no feeling towards his wife. What he has owned is his desire to be in possession. Despite he knew the fact that Hester would suffer a lot if she married to him. Their combination is just a misunderstanding. In order to fulfill his selfish desire, he just felt at ease to their unfortunate marriage. And once he found that his wife was unfaithful to him, his cruel nature exposed at once. For his revenge, he changed his name and intertwined with Dimmesdale like a viper. He appeared as a reliable friend in front of Dimmesdale, and then cheated him to expose all his secretes publicly. He didn’t uncover the secret of Dimmesdale not because of his generosity but for his conspiracy. Chillingworth, is a typical negative character in the novel, Hawthorne portrays this character deeply and profoundly.The great success of The Scarlet Letter in psychological description has put Hawthorne into a position of one of the most famous novelists in America. He created a new era for American romantic novel and psychoanalytic novel.。
Scarlett 角色分析

Scarlett O'Hara (full name Katie Scarlett O'Hara Hamilton Kennedy Butler) is the protagonist in Margaret Mitchell's only novel, Gone with the Wind, and in the later film of the same name. Scarlett is also the main character in the 1991 book Scarlett, a sequel to Gone with the Wind that was written by Alexandra Ripley, and in the 1994 television mini-series based on the book.Scarlett is a pretty, coquettish Southern belle who grows up on the Georgia plantation of Tara in the years before the American Civil War. Scarlett is described as being 16 years old at the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, which would put her approximate birthdate at about 1845. Selfish, shrewd and vain, Scarlett inherits the strong will of her Irish father Gerald, but also desires to please her well-bred, genteel French American mother Ellen, from a good Savannah family. Scarlett loves Ashley Wilkes, her aristocratic neighbor, but when his engagement to meek and mild-mannered Melanie Hamilton is announced, she marries Melanie's brother Charles out of spite. Her new husband dies early in the war, and Tara falls into the marauding hands of the Yankees. In the face of hardship, the spoiled Scarlett uncharacteristically shoulders the troubles of her family and friends, and eventually thenot-so-grieving widow marries her sister's beau, Frank Kennedy, in order to get funds to restore her beloved home. Repeatedly, she challenges the prescribed women's roles of her time, as a result, she becomes very disliked by the people of Atlanta. Scarlett's ongoing internal conflict between her feelings for the Southern gentleman Ashley and her attraction to the sardonic, opportunistic Rhett Butler—who becomes her third husband—embodies the general position of The South in the Civil War era.Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley is controversial to fans. Scarlett grows up over the course of the book, and while this is appealing and believable to some readers, others claim it cheapens the original novel and film and compromises her character. Either way, Scarlett was a runaway best-seller after its publication in 1991.In the 1939 film version of Gone with the Wind, Scarlett O'Hara is similar to the character in the original novel, but there are some noticeable differences. In the book, Scarlett gives birth to three children: Wade Hampton Hamilton, Ella Lorena Kennedy, and Eugenia Victoria "Bonnie Blue" Butler. In the film version, only Bonnie Blue is mentioned. (In the novel Scarlett, Scarlett O'Hara gives birth to another daughter by Rhett, Katie Colum "Cat" O'Hara Butler.)While the studio and the public agreed that the part of Rhett Butler should go to Clark Gable (except for Clark Gable himself), casting for the role of Scarlett was a little harder. The search for an actress to play Scarlett in the film versionof the novel famously drew the biggest names in the history of cinema - "The Scarlett Letters" as it was affectionately called - such as Bette Davis (who was cast in the similarly themed movie "Jezebel" when she failed to land the role of Scarlett), Katharine Hepburn who went so far as demanding an appointment with David O. Selznick and saying "I am Scarlett O'Hara! The role is practically written for me". David replied rather bluntly "I can't imagine Rhett Butler chasing you for ten years."Jean Arthur, and Lucille Ball were also considered. Susan Hayward was "discovered" when she tested for the part, and the career of Lana Turner developed quickly after her screen test. Joan Bennett was widely considered to be the most likely choice until she was supplanted by Paulette Goddard. However, failure to produce a marriage license between her and Charlie Chaplin lost her the part.Principal photography on the film began with the role still not cast. The scene depicting the burning of Atlanta was being filmed when producer David O. Selznick's brother arrived on the set with two visitors—British actor Laurence Olivier and his then girlfriend, novice actress Vivien Leigh. Myron Selznick announced he had found his brother's Scarlett, and with one look at Leigh, David knew he was right. Leigh was cast—despite public protest that the role was too "American" for an English actress—and Leigh eventually won an Academy Award for her performance.Part of Scarlett's enduring charm for women is her feminism, though recent critics have pointed out that many events in the novel are degrading to women. There is Rhett's ravishing of Scarlett (after which Scarlett is shown to have enjoyed herself immensely), Scarlett's apparent need of a man to be happy (whether it's Ashley Wilkes or Rhett Butler), and Melanie's sweet but submissive character (who is much adored by everyone).On the other hand, there have been many defenses for this. First of all, Melanie is not offensive to women, she is simply a more traditional character. Many believe the 'rape scene' quickly becomes consensual (this theory is backed by the novel Scarlett, although it was not written by Mitchell). And again, Scarlett is an individual character, and her need for a man should not be interpreted as universal.Scarlett is by far the most developed character in Gone with the Wind. She stands out because she is strong and saves her family but is incredibly selfish and petty at the same time. She challenges nineteenth-century society's gender roles repeatedly, running a store and two lumber mills at one point. Scarlett is in some ways the least stereotypically feminine of women (in other ways the most), and the more traditional Melanie Wilkes is in many ways herfoil. But Scarlett survives the war, several marriages, the birth of children, and even a miscarriage. Melanie, on the other hand, struggles with fragile health and a shy nature. Without Melanie Wilkes, Scarlett might simply be seen as harsh and "over the top," but beside Melanie, Scarlett presents a fresher, deeper female characterization; she lives a complicated life during a difficult period of history.Some of Scarlett's lines from Gone with the Wind, like "Fiddle-dee-dee!," "Tomorrow is another day," "Great balls of fire!" and "I'll never go hungry again!", have become modern catchphrases.Rhett Butler is the handsome, dashing fictional hero of Gone with the Wind written by American author, Margaret Mitchell. The novel introduces him as the problem-solving pragmatist who is sure that the South cannot win a protracted war with the North. His opinions, expressed in the parlor of a Southern gentleman's household, are not viewed favorably by the Southerners and as a result, he is even challenged to a duel. Rhett gracefully takes a bow with the famous lines "I seem to have ruined everybody's brandy and cigars and dreams of victory and war."In the beginning of the novel, we first meet Rhett at the barbeque at the Twelve Oaks Plantation, the home of Ashley Wilkes and India Wilkes. The novel describes Rhett as "a visitor from Charleston;" a black sheep, he was kicked out of West Point and because of his true rebelious nature, he is not accepted by any family with repute in the whole of Charleston, and perhaps all of South Carolina. When Scarlett O'Hara, who was at the Twelve Oaks party where Rhett was introduced, hears of this, she is shocked and intrigued at the same time. Rhett's enthrallment with Scarlett begins when he overhears her declaration of love for Ashley in the library while the rest of the "proper" girls are taking a nap in the late afternoon to prepare for the dance that would take place later that evening. He recognizes that she's willful and spirited, and also that they're alike in many ways, including their disgust with the impending, and later ongoing, war with the Yankees.They meet again when Scarlett has already lost her first husband, Melanie's brother, Charles Hamilton, while she's staying with Melanie and her Aunt Pittypat in Atlanta during the war. Rhett, the dashing blockade runner, shocks the entire charity ball that was being thrown to raise money for the confederate troops, by asking to dance with Scarlett, who is now a widow, something that was unspeakable in the Antebellum south. Once a woman's husband passed away, she wasn't permitted to do a great many things.Rhett seemingly ruins Scarlett's reputation after this very public display of frivolity and Scarlett's father, Gerald O'Hara comes to speak to Rhett and to take Scarlett back to Tara. However, Rhett, the blackguard he is, gets Gerald intoxicated and he and Rhett come to terms, so to speak. Gerald returns to Tara and Scarlett remains in Atlanta, along with her newborn son.When Scarlett flees Atlanta, Rhett joins the confederate soldiers for their one last stand against Sherman. Scarlett couldn't understand why Rhett chose to ally himself at the moment when the confederate cause had failed.After a great many months, Scarlett returns to Atlanta, this time to solicit money from Rhett to save Tara from being stolen out from under her, only to learn from Aunt Pitty that he was in military jail, imprisoned by the Yankees for stealing the confederate gold. Scarlett comes waltzing in, supposedly horrified that Rhett's life was in danger, all the while maneuvering him to give her money for the plantation. When Rhett sees through her ploy, he laughs in her face, in which case Scarlett flees, only to be confronted by Belle, a prostitue who enjoyed keeping company with Rhett. Disgusted with how low she's sunk, she's on her way back to Aunt Pittypat's when she meets Frank Kennedy, her sister Sue Ellen's beau. Learning that Frank has done very well for himself, she plys him with affection and finally secures a marriage proposal, to which she accepts, thereby securing Tara's future indefinitely.Months later, Scarlett is shocked when she sees Rhett Butler while she's running Frank's store, free from the Yankees and amused that she has rushed into yet another marriage with a man that she doesn't love, much less the fact that she stole him right out from under her sister's nose.After Frank Kennedy is killed during a Ku Klux Klan raid on the shanty town after Scarlett is attacked, Rhett saves Ashley Wilkes' and Dr. Meade's life, whom were both active members of the KKK by alibiing him to the Yankee captain, a man whom he's played cards with on several occasions.While Scarlett is torn with guilt of causing the death of her second husband, Rhett appears and offers a marriage proposal, promising to give her everything. Scarlett accepts for the money while Rhett secretly hopes that Scarlett will eventually return the love he's had since the day he saw her at Twelve Oaks.In the course of the novel, Rhett becomes increasingly enamored with the survivalist instincts of Scarlett O'Hara in the chaos surrounding the war.Like Thomas Sutpen and Charles Bon from Absalom, Absalom!, Rhett decides to join in the Southern cause, but unlike his fellow Confederate, Ashley Wilkes, Rhett is not spiritually paralyzed by the South's loss.Rhett takes leave of Scarlett after rescuing her and Melanie Wilkes from the burning of Atlanta, expressing his desire to fight alongside the South and its lost cause. Scarlett cannot comprehend Rhett's sudden decision to fight, which underscores her total rejection of the Southern chivalric ideal.Scarlett takes her burdens on alone, and it hurts Rhett that she won't just lay them at his feet as he would carry them for her. Rhett discovers that though she has married again, Scarlett still harbors her infatuation for the gentlemanly Ashley Wilkes, Melanie's husband.Later, when Frank Kennedy dies during a Ku Klux Klan controversy and Scarlett is guilt-ridden and intoxicated, Rhett propositions her into marrying him. Scarlett accepts his proposal for his money; Rhett realizes this, but accepts it as he understands her opportunistic nature. But her continuing affection for Ashley Wilkes becomes a problem for the couple. When their daughter Bonnie falls off a pony and dies, the tragedy causes a rift between the two which is impossible to bridge.But Rhett is not the type of man to wait forever and twelve years to most people is an eon. He leaves because he knows that this is what he has to do. He has to get away from Scarlett. Her confession of love is something that startles him but is also something that he half expects. He knows that Scarlett could never be happy with Ashley and when she discovers that, he does not want to be around when she throws her obsession onto him. When he finally gets Scarlett's love, he is not happy and leaves with his famous parthian shaft that has since been immortalized: "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." The frankly was added in the movie - in the book, the line merely reads, "My dear, I don't give a damn."In a sequel called Scarlett, written by Alexandra Ripley, Scarlett finally succeeds in getting Rhett back.。
kAnalysis of Scarlett in Gone with the Wind

From the analysis of her character, she cannot be regarded as a perfect woman. By a rough glimpse, she seems to be a rude,ignorant,and hypocritical remaining of the old Southern aristocrats.Just like other southern people,she hates the war, disgusts the new established south government, deeply recalls the previous life,together with the careless revealing of her attitude towards slavery.They become the root where the criticism derives from.However, Scarlett is real and believable.
After the Civil War, Scralett’s true self, which is apparently opposite to the lady-mannered discipline of the old south,crazily yield sand matures in the desolate earth after the war.Scarlett’s anti-traditional behavior is more and more undisguised.
'Gone with the Wind' has represented the turbulent social reality in the South in American Civil War. Scarlett O’hara is beautiful then, in order to realize her dream of living better, she regards love and marriage as a chip of trade. There’s no true love in her three marriages, until the end, she understands that Ashley, the person she bears in mind for twelve years is not her true love, but one beautiful unreal image belongs to the South in the past and does not adapt to this coming new society. The person who she really loves is similar to her --- Rhett Butler.
the scarlet letter 人物分析

Review of the Scarlet LetterJane Class 3 1202050201312 The Scarlet Letter written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, an American writer.This novel is his masterpiece. It is set in 17th-century New England under the colonial rule in North America. The book is based on a Boston love tragedy during the years 1642 to 1649.In this novel, it mainly tells us the different fate of three main characters, Hester Prynne, Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth. Hester was forced to wear a scarlet letter “A” on the breast of her gown because of adultery. However, she refused to reveal her lover’s identity. It made her husband, Chillingworth, fly into a rage. He swear to revenge. Then he found that his wife’s lover is the respectable young priest, Dimmesdale. He got close to the young priest and torture him psychologically. Finally the priest could not stand the inner torment. He confessed publicly a fact that he was Hester’s lover. Then he died in Hester’s arms. Frustrated in his revenge, Chillingworth got sick. After one year, he died.This novel is an 1850 romantic work of fiction. However, in my eyes, it not only is a story of love, but also is a story of soul. What impress me deeply is the human nature, the characterization, and the psychological description. The images of the three main characters are vivid and lively.Hester Prynne, a beautiful woman who born in a British crumbling aristocratic family, was married to a monstrous old scholar. When her husband could be dead or alive, she was fallen in love with a priest and gave birth a daughter. It breached the Puritan doctrine. So she was found guilty. She must to wear a scarlet letter “A” in her lifetime for her sin. But she would not reveal her lover, and raised the child by herself.Here we will praise her for the resistance of the unreasonable marriage system, and impress by her great love. Perhaps when a woman deeply love a man, she will sacrifice all of hers for her love. She can use her fragile body to protect her love one. She not only can sacrifice everything but also can endure everything for love, and enjoy it. In this sacrifice, she does not care about the secular and the personal interest. It reflects the real greatness and nobility.She was so amazing that I could not find a suitable word to praise her. But actually she impressed me than anyone else ever done. When facing the disastrous punishment, she just bear it by herself. Although the punishment is cruel for a woman, she did not escape from it. Besides, she did not show her weakness to gain people’s sympathy. She also did not committed suicide as I imagine. Because as for a traditional Chinese woman, she probably tend to this extreme way. She would give up her life because of shame, and want to use her death to end this scandal stain life. However, Hester just accepted the punishment calmly and continue the pursuit of freedom and happiness. She was so inviolability that to look down upon the so-called Puritans.As a woman, a mother, she was great. After sacrifice her everything, the only fortune Hester got was her daughter, Pearl. She love Pearl. Pearl was her pursuit of beauty. However she worried about the groundless sin would come upon her daughter.So she atoned for love. She devoted her life to serve society, though those who accepted her help are ungrateful to her.Arthur Dimmesdale, a real martyr, was a coward who dare to love but afraid to admit his love. Although he was wretched, he overall was a good man. He struggled in pain, wasted his life, played a dual role, saint and sinner. When he could not tell who was good or bad, he stick to his inner secret. He dare not to disclose his sin. So he suffered from his inner guilty. However, from his respective, I think we should understand him. Because his faith not only supported him, but also imprisoned him in a cage.Roger Chillingworth, a crazy avenger, was real evil. Once he was thoughtful, well-read, and curious old scholar. Now he was toward to the abyss of evil because of hatred. In order to revenge, his erudition became a weapon. And all his good quality tend to be crazy. To him, I just felt pity. Although he was a boring people, he was learned and calm, wise and respected. However, because of hatred, he became evil, disgusting and crazy. It is a tragedy.This story has a sad ending but with sense of reality. The death of the priest and Chillingworth has its own cause. Dimmesdale is a pure pious puritan. After he had affair with Hester, he became a sinner. The sin torture him mentally and physically. It ruin him. Chillingworth was crazy. His hatred afflicted him day and night. He devoted his whole life to revenge. It destroyed him.But Hester was strong-willed, stoic and more tolerant and independence. She suffered a lot, by never was defeated by the suffering. She was goodness and willing to help others. Finally, she changed the meaning of the scarlet letter A, from “Adultery”to “Able” .Maybe only the good people could deserve a good end.。
What are the main aspects of Scarlet’s Character in Gone With the Wind

姜若琳/Rowling Class 3 091315271 What are the main aspects of Scarlet’s Character in Gone With the Wind.Scarlett has distinctive characters, she is complicated. On one hand, she is vain, rebel, selfish, egocentric, self-centered and self-indulgent, on the other hand, she is imbued with wise, inherited brave, determined, independent, responsible, obstinate and self-striving gleams. All these characters have a deep and determinative influence on her life and love. Scarlett’s characterization shows up in four periods in Gone With the Wind.1At the beginning of the novel living in Tara, Scarlett is a wild and strong-willed lady. She is not only charming and attractive, but also vain, willful, naive and selfish. When Scarlett first lives in Atlanta, the disappointment of love and the suffering of the war make her become brave and responsible, and she is selfish and carefree. Coming back to her home Tara, in order to keep her home around, Scarlett becomes brave, determined, obstinate, self-striving and greedy. Then when Scarlett goes back to Atlanta, she is independent, determined, indomitable and self-centered. This essay will show this from these four aspects.(165)Living in Tara, Scarlett is a young lady. In the period before war, Scarlett was a little girl only worried about her love fairs, she had no ideas about the war. As we can see, Scarlett didn’t believe there will going to be any war, she was really boring about it, what she reply to the twins who were excitedly talking about the war is only making a mouth of bored impatience. 2Being a charming young lady of the old South, Scarlett cares more about the coming barbecues party, how she looks, her new green flowered-muslin dress, and of course her deeply loved prince Ashley. Of course the elegant and leisure life make her selfish and vanity. For love Scarlett is stubborn and wayward. She had a romantic emotion to love. But, at that time, ladies and gentlemen’s demeanor formed the atmosphere of the traditional society. Her parents want to make her a lady, a traditional one, but to Scarlett, it is really a disaster, in front of her parents, she could bear to pretend, but she went her own way at other times, that’s her, a real Scarlett, an very proud own, extremely conceited but very charming Scarlett. 3So no surprising that all the young men loves her, include Rhett Butler. Inhis eyes, Scarlett is not very beautiful, not very graceful, and even a little veining, but it’s just this woman attacked his heart, this strong will and cat like woman.(250)Living in Tara, In this period of life, Scarlett is a young lady. She is a vain, charming, selfish, willful, carefree, egotistic and self-impotant girl.She could never long endure any conversation of which she is not the chief subject, and she hopes that every man should pay attention only to her.4Because of her father Gerald’s spoiling, Scarlett possesses manly characters. She rides horse and climbs trees. Scarlett disobeys her mother Ellen and Mummy Jincy’s orders and words. Whatever she wants to do, she does. In the early life in Tara, Scarlett’s characters develop freely. Her egotistic, stubborn and vain characters come into being. Scarlett thinks that she is the center of the world and all the boys must fall in love with her. Scarlett falls in love with Ashley at the first sight.5When twin brothers tell her that Ashley and his cousin Melanie, a plain and gentle girl from Atlanta, are going to be married. Shocked, Scarlett sits in silence until the two leave, without inviting them to dinner. Ignoring her mammy’s cau tions against the cold, she goes to meet her father to confirm the news. In this period, Scarlett’s important parts of her complex characters are her selfishness and contravention to the conventional manner. . She had never, never catch another beau and ev erybody’s laugh fit to die at her, and it would hurt Melanie, because she loves Charles so much, and it would hurt Stu and Brent.‖ 1 What a self –important girl, she never considers others’ feelings. All her words and deeds show that Scarlett’s these chara cters.6(262)In the first period of living in Atlanta. Scarlett becomes brave, selfish, carefree, self-centered and responsible. In this period,’s selfish character develops, so does her favor to free and happiness. Scarlett’s contravention also grows. Me anwhile, the changing of her circumstance also gives her a lot.7She knows how to live in hard times. Scarlett’s responsible character also can be found in this period of living in Atlanta.Two months later, going away from war, Charles, Scarlett’s husband dies of the measles. Scarlett becomes a widow. With complicated feelings, Scarlett goes toAtlanta. 8Atlanta is the very city that provides a place to develop Scarlett’s characters.She does not like to talk about the war. She dislikes the war. In fact, she does not care about the war. She just cares about herself. As a young widow, her thoughts and activities are the same as before, but her status of a widow prevents her from dancing, which she always loves to do.Scarlett also works as a seller and a nurse. To be a seller or a nurse, does not mean that she wants to help others or serve her motherland. ―Certainly, there was nothing romantic about nursing. To her, it meant groans, delirium, death and smells.‖93 She just wants to make herself be busy and release her depression of being a widow.Atlanta is falling. Scarlett wants to turn back to Tara for help.10However, Melanie is going to give birth. Without the doctor’s help, Scarlett becomes a midwife and delivers her child. What a brave girl! She does not leave Melanie alone. She keeps her promise.(264)In the second period of living in Tara Scarlett becomes Brave, selfish, greedy, determined, obstinate and self-striving. This period of living is a turning point of’s characters and life. She is no longer a willful and vain widow, but a brave, determined, obstinate, self-striving and greedy proprietor. She shows her incredible willpower and determination .The people who live in Tara are shocked by her change. Readers are also moved by her braveness and determination. Arriving home at Tara, Scarlett finds the house in ruins, the food gone, the crops burned, most of the slaves run off, her mother Ellen dead, her father Gerald with dementia, and her two sisters sick with typhoid. She tries every means to save Tara. She grasps the reins of authority and tries to turn the place around. She forces her family and the slaves to tend fields and pick cottonThe second period of living in Tara urges Scarlett to grow up a lot. A greedy, determined, obstinate and self-striving Scarlett can be found in this period. In the second period of living in Atlanta Scarlett becomes selfish, independent, determined, indomitable and self-centered .This period is the summit of the development of’s characters. Scarlett’s philosophy makes a big change, because of the disappointment of love and the sufferings of war and life. Finally she finds that Rhett is the man who she loves heartily, however, it is too late — Rhett already losesheart and leaves her. But Scarlett is strong and confident. Through her persistent trying, Rhett comes back to her in the end. She says:―After all, tomorrow is another day.‖11(265)Scarlett’s character is complicated. She is brave, determined, obstinate, independent and self-striving. All these characters have a deep influence on her life and love. She claims to strive and compete to gain success, even deceive and speculate others. She is a successful self-fighter and pragmatist. At the beginning of the novel living in Tara, Scarlett is a wild and strong-willed lady. She is not only charming and attractive, but also vain, willful, naive and selfish. When So in my viewpoint, the whole novel shows the four periods of the characterization of Scarlett. From a young charming, vain and self-centered girl, Scarlett gradually grows up as a brave, determined, hard working, independent and self-striving woman, urged by the war and life.(120)Introduction and Conclusion 163+120;Theory and background information 250;Body 262+264+260;Altogether 1321Endnotes1Margaret Mitchell. Chapter 6. Gone With the Wind. Yilin Press, 1996, 1282Mitchell. 1853Angelis. Secrets About Life Every Woman Should Know [M].Beijing: ZhongxinPress,2003,1004姚金红. 解析〈乱世佳人〉中郝思嘉的女性主体意识[J]. 西安文理学院学报, 2006, 9 5纪丽丽. 两个女权主义者的命运——王熙凤与郝思嘉的对比研究[J]. 西南师范大学学报, 2006,56丁芸. 英美文学研究新视野[M]. 杭州: 浙江大学出版社, 2005, 687荆兴梅.〈飘〉的女性主义解读[J]. 江苏科技大学学报, 2005,58Clinton, Catherine. The Other Civil War: American Women in the Nineteenth Century [M]. 1994,.489Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind [M]. The United States of America, reprint ,1973. 36. 10Baym, Nina.. Feminism and American Literary History [M]. New Y ork: Rutgers University Press. , 1992,8011张京媛.〈当代女性主义文学批评〉[J],北京:北京大学出版社.1991,67。
对《飘》中斯佳丽的人物格分析英语专业

对《飘》中斯佳丽的人物格分析英语专业河北民族师范学院外语系2012届专科毕业论文题目:对《飘》中斯佳丽的人物性格分析Analysis of Scarlett’s Character in Gone with the WindLiuA Graduation Thesis Submitted toForeign language Department of Hebei Normal University forNationalitiesIn Partial Fulfillment of the RequirementsFor the Diploma of Education in EnglishTutor: Zhang YongliSpecialty: EnglishDirection: English LiteratureChengde, Hebei ProvinceMay 2012毕业设计(论文)原创性声明和使用授权说明原创性声明本人郑重承诺:所呈交的毕业设计(论文),是我个人在指导教师的指导下进行的研究工作及取得的成果。
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Analysis scarlet letter

An Analysis of Symbolism in The Scarlet LetterAbstractNathaniel Hawthorne is a great romantic novelist in America in the 19th century. As a great roman tic novelist, Hawthorne is outstanding in handling application of symbolism. The Scarlet Letter is Hawthorne's most important symbolic novel, in this work, Hawthorne uses the symbolism so skillf ully that it enhances the artistic effects of his work greatly. Symbolism runs through the whole nov el. The most important symbol is the scarlet letter itself. In order to display the theme, symbolism plays an important role. Some of the symbols are obvious while some obscure, but no matter what they are, they are all out of the author’s deliberate imagination .So without the symbolism, the the me of the novel cannot be expressed so vividly and impressively. This thesis mainly concentrates on symbolism.Key words: Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter, symbolism,I.IntroductionNathaniel Hawthorne was one of the leading American writers of his century. The Scarlet Letter was published in 1850.The novel, with the background of New England life in Colonial period, de scribes a young girl called Hester Prynne, who is bound up with the illegal marriage, and publicly exposed for adultery, however, she reconstructs herself in spirit owing to atoning for her crime for a long time.Hawthorne remarkably handles the puritan background, and carefully unfolds the deep shadows from which the grim tragedy naturally proceeds. Moreover, all those moods are woven s o consistently, naturally and harmoniously into the story that its characters, action, and setting blen d into a delicate but enduring work of art.II. Symbolic “A”In the novel, the scarlet capital letter “A” changes its meaning many different t imes, so it’s ambiguous. This change is significant. It shows growth in characters and the commun ity in which they live. The letter “A” begins as a symbol of sin. It then becomes a symbol of solitu de and alienation, and finally it becomes a symbol of the word “Able”,“Angel”, and “Admirable”.The letter “A” is the first letter of the word “Adultery”. It is considered as “the mark of guilt” w hen it appears at the first time, for Hester commits the crime of adultery, in accordance with the ste rn puritan laws she is made to stand in the public scaffold with her illegitimate child and to wear t he letter A embroidered on her dress. The puritan treatment continues. As Hester walks through th e streets, she will be looked down upon as if she is some sort of demon from hell that commits a te rrible crime. This letter is meant to be worn in shame, and to make Hester feel unwanted. “Here, s he said to herself, had been the scene of her guilt, and here should be the scene of her earthly punis hment.” [1] Hester is ashamed of her sin, but she could not escape it. Though she is ashamed, she also receives her great treasure —Pearl, as her only source of survival! She is a very strong woma n to be able to hold up so well against what she must face. Other people will have fled Boston, and seek a place where no one knows of her terrible sin. That Hester chooses to8 stay there shows a lot of strength and integrity of her. The scarlet letter “A” also stands for Hester’s lonely life in New England. After she is released, Hester lives in a cottage near the outskir ts of the city. “It had been built by an earlier settler, and abandoned, because the soil about it was t oo sterile for cultivation, while its comparative remoteness put it out of the sphere of that social ac tivity which already marked the habits of the emigrants.” [2] Hester’s social life is virtually eliminated as a result of her shameful history: However, there was nothing that made her feel as if she belonged to it. Every gesture, every word, and even the silence of those with whom she came to c ontact, implied, and often expressed, that she was banished, and as much alone as if she inhabited another sphere, or communicated with the common nature by other organs and senses than the rest of human kind. She stood apart from moral interest s…seemed to be the sole portion that she retai ned in the universal heart. [3] Hester has no friends in the world, and little Pearl is the only co mpanion of her lonely life, so the scarlet letter “A” is also a symbol of the words “Alone” and “Ali enate”.Later the scarlet letter “A” also stands for Hester’s ability and virtuous hearts. So the scar let letter “A” changes its meaning into being “Able”,“Angel”, and “Admirable”. Hester is skillful in her beautiful needlework. The scarlet letter first shows her terrific skill. She stitches a large A o nto her dress with gold tread, giving the letter an air of elegance. And her excellent needlework for the rich allows her to maintain a fairly lifestyle. Furthermore she tries her best to help the poor and the9 sick although she is really poor too: The letter was the symbol in her…so much power to d o, and power to sympathies…that many people refused to interpret the scarlet letter “A” by its orig inal signification. They said that is meant Able; so strong was Hester Prynne, with a woman’s stre ngth… [4] Gradually, people begin to regard Hester as a diligent kindhearted and able woman. “Do you see that woman with the embroidered badge? It is our Hester—the town’s own Hester—w ho is so kind to the poor, so helpful to the sick, so comfortable to the afflicted!” [5] Till now Heste r becomes a highly respected person in puritan society by overcoming one of the harshest punishm ents, the scarlet letter. This object on her bosom, however, does the exact opposite of that which it was meant for. Eventually, Hester inverts all the adds against here due to her courage, pride and ef fort. Hester went beyond the letter of the law and did everything asked for here in order to prove t hat she is able. At last, Hester became quite a popular seamstress, admired all over the town of Bo ston for her work. Thou, the letter “A” meant “Angel” in their eyes. The changes in The Scarlet L etter are significant. They show the progressive possession of her sin, her lonely, and her ability. H ester is a strong woman who goes through more emotional torture than that of most people go thro ugh in a lifetime.11 on the edge of the woods. It shows that Hester does not live under the strict puritanical mora l code, but rather tries to live in a place of limbo between the moral and the immoral universe simu ltaneously. The stream in the forest also has its special meaning. In the chapter nineteen, Pearl refu ses to cross the stream on the other side of the boundary, even though her parents think they can ru n away. “I have a strange fancy, that this brook is the boundary between two worlds, and that thou canst never meet thy Pearl again.”[9] This brook is the boundary of two world—the child and the parents; And it shows that the two lovers an never really meet their daughter. As the author menti oned earlier, The Scarlet Letter is pervaded with symbolism. Some prominent and complex symbo ls have already been revealed. However the novel also revolves around two other major symbols: l ight and darkness and the scarlet letter A! The novel is filled with light and darkness symbols bec ause they represent the most common battle of all time, good versus evil. When Hester and her da ughter are walking in the forest, Pearl exclaims: “Mother, the sunshine does not love you. It runs a way and hides itself, because it is afraid of something on your bosom. Now See! There it is, playin g a good way off. Stand you here, and let me run and catch it. I am but a child. It will not flee from me, for I wear nothing on my bosom yet.”[10] At that time Hester tries to stretch her hand into thecircle of light, but the sunshine vanishes. This short scene actually represents Hester’s daily strug gle in her life. The light represents what Hester wants to be, which is pure. The movement of the li ght represents Hester’s constant denial of acceptance. Hester’s lack of surprise and quick suggesti on to go into the forest, where is dark, shows that she never expected to be admitted and is resigne d to her station in life.V. Conclusion In closing, one of the most important reasons that The Scarlet Letter is so well kno wn is the way Hawthorne leaves the novel open to be interpreted several different ways by his abu ndant use of symbolism. This background, together with a believable plot, convincing characteriza tion, and important literary devices enable Nathaniel Hawthorne in The Scarlet Letter develop the theme of the heart as a prison. Hawthorne describes the purpose of the novel when he says: “Be tr ue! Be true! Be true! Show freely to the world, if not your worse, yet some trait whereby the worst may be inferred!”[18] The theme is beneficial because it can be put into term in today’s world. Th e Scarlet Letter is one of the few books that will be timeless, because it deals with alienation, sin, punishment, and guilt, emotions that will continue to be felt by every generation to come. At the sa me time, through the tragic love between Hester and Dimmesdale, Hawthorne gives us the deep m eaningful lesson: marriage should be based on pure love with aim to make both18 men and women feel happy in their relationship.。
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Analysis of Scarlett’s Character in Gone with the Wind对《飘》中斯佳丽的人物性格分析摘要《飘》是美国现代女作家玛格丽特.米歇尔于1936年发表的一部长篇通俗小说。
小说的女主人公斯佳丽被他们描绘成一个极度自私、爱慕虚荣、冷酷无情、为达目的不择手段的女性。
引言简要介绍作者的生平、以及当时的女性主义。
作者玛格丽特.米歇尔是一个具有女性主义意识的女作家。
她在小说中含蓄的批判了美国内战时期的南方妇道观,通过委婉的语言更深刻彻底的揭示出南方妇道观的虚伪、愚昧和对妇女的压抑。
战前、中、后的斯佳丽具体的阐述了主人公是怎样从战前一个自私、任性但又坚强、勇敢的南方贵族千金小姐转变为战时的懂得照顾别人、果敢但又有些残酷的生活上的勇士既而转变为战后的勤劳、有心计、有思想、有远见的南方新女性。
对比部分主要是斯佳丽与媚兰与斯佳丽对比。
斯佳丽与媚兰是小说中性格截然不同的两个女主人公,而不同的性格是她们的人生也大相径庭。
思嘉果断、坚决的性格决定了她奋进的一生,媚兰的宽容、坚韧同样注定了她终生的勤苦。
结论通过全篇总结得出,跟她的三个主要人生经历密不可分,通过对社会背景、人生经历和对比的分析,总结出斯佳丽一如既往的性格和由生活所迫改变了的性格并日益成熟,逐渐的成为有思想、有远见的南方新女性。
关键词:《飘》;战争;女性主义;对比AbstractGone with the Wind, written by Margaret Mitchell has been one of the bestsellers and popular with the reader ever since its publication in 1936. Scarlett O‟Hara the protagonist in the novel is an extremely selfish, vain, and merciless woman who will not hesitate to resort to any means in order to reach her ends.Ch apter One gives a brief introduction of Margaret Mitchell‟s life, the traditional Southern Womanhood and the feminist. Margaret Mitchell is a woman writer. She has strong feminism. We can get it from the novel, especially from Scarlett. Chapter Two to Chapter Four described the life of Scarlett before war, in the war and after war. These three chapters analyze how Scarlett completes her transformation from 16 years old girl deeply influenced by traditional Southern Womanhood to a serious-minded and far-sighted woman. and compared Scarlett with Melanie,they are quite different girls, and those differences make their life very different, any way, attitude is everything. The novel named Gone with the Wind. And Melanie is the wind; she is traditional, graceful and tolerant. The old South has gone with the wind, and so Melanie. Scarlett was not, she is new, and she is decisive and firm. She is quite an opponent of the old South. New American comes, and so Scarlett.The conclusion summarizes the whole thesis and reiterates the main viewpoint: her transformations connected closely with her three stages of life. She is increasingly maturing and in the end becomes a new Southern woman with strong feminism leanings. When we faced with difficulties we will call the memo ries of Scarlett and her words to the world “Tomorrow is another day”!Key words: Gone with the Wind;War;Feminist leaning;ContrastContents Introduction (1)Chapter One The Period before the War (2)2.1 About the Title (2)2.2 The Plot Summary (2)2.3 Scarlett in the Period before War (4)2.3.1 Education of the Women in the South before War (4)2.3.2 Scarlett the Rebellious Girl (6)2.4 The Summary (8)Chapter Two The Period in the War (9)3.1The Plot Summary (9)3.2 Scarlett‟s Capability of Changing with Times (11)3.3 Scarlett‟s Persistent Pursuit of Better Life (13)3.4 The Summary (14)Chapter Three The Period after the War (15)4.1The Plot Summary (15)4.2 Scarlett‟s Persistent Pursuit of True Love (16)4.3 The Contrast of Scarlett and Melanie (18)Conclusion (19)Notes (21)Bibliography (22)IntroductionGone with the Wind has been hailed as a triumph of American literature and film. In1937, Margaret. Mitchell won Pulitzer Prize, for her sweeping portrayal of the crumbling of the Old South. Since then, the novel has sold millions of copies. The film, a production by David O.Selznick, exceeded all expectations, receiving critical and public acclaim that included an unprecedented ten Academy Awards.[1]Even today, Gone with the Wind, despite its many historical inaccuracies, forms the basis of American popular memory of the Old South in the years since the Civil War, but Margaret Mitchell‟s tale is the one that is most deeply embedded in American culture.The novel mainly describes the life of Scarlett who is the daughter of Tara‟s master around the Americ an Civil War. Meanwhile with the hint of a triangular love between Scarlett, Ashley and Rhett, the novel depicts a wide and prosperous picture of the social life of the South in America. An important element of the story‟s popularity is Scarlett O‟Hara, th e outstanding heroine who is full of conflicting and complicated features. This article analyzes the character of Scarlett from three aspects: the first one is her attitude towards life around the civil war; the second one is the exterior and internal reas ons for the shaping of her character; the last one is Scarlett‟s attitude towards love and marriage. The analysis aims at showing the eternal charms of the image, Scarlett in the novel.Chapter One the Period before the WarMitchell‟s work relates the story of a rebellious Georgia Southern belle named Scarlett O‟Hara and her experiences with friends, family, lovers, and enemies in the South during the antebellum period, the War of Northern Aggression, and the Reconstruction era.2.1 About the TitleThe title of Gone with the Wind is taken from the first line of the third stanza of the poem Non sum uails eram bonae sub regno Cynarae by Ernest D owson: “I have forgotten much, Cynara! Gone with the wind.”[6] The title phrase also appears in the novel: When Scarlett of French-Irish ancestry escapes the bombardment of Atlanta by Northern forces; she flees back to her family‟s plantation, Tara. At one point, she wondered, “Was Tara still standing? Or was Tara also gone with the wind which had swept through Georgia?”[7]The title is beautiful, gone with the wind, everything, like the old traditional South, like Melanie, like the slave system and Scarlett‟s love to Ashley…2.2 The Plot SummaryThe novel opens at Tara, the O‟Haras‟ plantation in Georgia, with scarlet O‟Hara flirting idly with Brent and Stuart Tarleton, twin brothers who live on a nearby plantation. Amidst the chatter, the pair tells Scarlett that Ashley Wilkes, the man Scarlett secretly loves, and his cousin Melanie Hamilton, a plain and gentle lady from Atlanta, are to be married. Shocked, Scarlett sits in silence until the two leave, without inviting them to dinner. Ignoring her m ammy‟s cautions against the cold, Scarlett goes to meet her father to confirm the news. After discovering the truth of theengagement, Scarlett is miserable, but realizes that Ashley has no idea that she‟s in love with him. She plans to make Ashley jealous by surrounding herself with boys in love with her at the barbecue the next day at the Wilkes plantation of Twelve Oaks, and then afterwards admit to him that she prefers him above all others. She never thought of the war, even it would break out soon, even everyone in the South was talking about it included her father, what she cares is only Ashley, the man she loved. But things did not go according to plan, when she finds Ashley later, he tells her that though he lives her, he will still marry Melanie. The innocent poor girl was really hurt. She slapped Ashley in his face. Moreover the unexpected man Rhett Butler, hidden behind a couch during the emotional scene, sees Scarlett throw a vase across the room in anger after Ashley leaves, and is impressed by her fire. But Scarlett still holds the idea that she herself is the true love of Ashley. To revenge Ashley, she decided to marry Charles Hamilton who she didn‟t love at all, but Charles sister Melanie really appreciated that. So both couples married within two weeks, just at the beginning of her marriage, Scarlett regretted her decision and also the war broke out…Before the war, Scarlett lived an elegant and leisure life. It‟s just such kind of life made her selfish and vanity. For love she is stubborn and wayward. She had romantic emotion to love. But, at that time, ladies and gentlemen‟s demeanor formed the atmosphere of the traditional society. She was born in a sumptuous manor Tara in Georgia South America. Her parents want to make her a lady, and gave her very traditional education. Scarlett didn‟t like doing that, she pretend to be a lady in front of her parents, but she went her own way at other times. In her inner world, she wanted an unrestricted and free life. So, a very proud own, extremely conceited but very beautiful charming Scarlett jumped out in front of us. Scarlett was very proud that so many handsome young men surrounded her, and she was always the very center of them. But Ashley was the only young man that she admired, indulged and deeply loved. She was a proud girl, so proud that she believed deeply Ashley loved her even she got the news he will marry Melanie.2.3 Scarlett in the Period before War2.3.1 Education of the Women in the South before WarScarlett O‟Hara, a Southern girl before the Civil War, is no exception. As an ordinary girl growing up in Southern culture, Scarlett is undoubtedly deeply influenced by the prevailing ideas of what a Southern woman should do in a male-dominated world. Gradually she becomes a woman, a representative of Southern women. To the Southern woman, marriage is the destiny traditionally offered to her and she is constantly taught the art of catching a decent and wealthy husband as soon as possible. The unmarried woman suffers from the poor situation and tries every means to catch a husband. Simone Beauvoir say in The Second Sex, “ In France, as in America, mothers, older friends, and women‟s magazines cynically teach young women the art of catching husbands, as a flypaper catches flies. It is a kind of fishing or hunting that requires great skill.”[8] Slowly Scarlett is brought up, not apparently different from other girls. Like other girls, she is extremely interested in love and marriage. Scarlett‟s mother Ellen, by soft-voiced admonition, their common Mammy, constant carping and labor to inculcate in her the qualities that will make her truly desirable as a wife. She does not disappoint them in this aspect because, by the age of sixteen, she has learned to use the attributes of womanhood to advance predatory designs: the manipulation and seduction of men. Extremely selfish in love and marriage, “she was constitutionably unable to endure any man being in love with any woman not herself” (p.16). Bored by the Tarleton twins‟ talk of war, she moodily changes the subject to something far more interesting to her: the next day‟s barbecue and hall at the Twelve Oaks. Deeply rooted in Western culture is the assumption that a woman‟s energies are properly devoted to the chores of her family. In the South, little atte ntion is paid to women‟s education and educational opportunities for girls are more limited than those for boys. In the opening chapter of the novel, we got the information that Scarlett is not offered enougheducation and she has not opened a book since she left the Fayetteville Female Academy at the age of fifteen. However, the door of education is much wider for the boys. Stuart and Brent, the Tarleton twins, have been expelled from the University of Georgia, the fourth university that has thrown them out in two years, when they sit with Scarlett in the cool shade of the porch of Tara, the plantation of Scarlett‟s father Gerald O‟Hara. Unexpectedly, they are soon offered another chance to go on with their college education. All of a girl‟s education, if t here is any, is reduced to the arts and graces of being attractive to men. It is universally acknowledged that scarlet eventually becomes a belle in the neighboring counties after years of the conbined efforts of her mother and Mammy. She does not feel sorry for her lack of education. In fact to all men in the South, lack of education carries no shame at all, though they are given more chances to receive education. The things that matter to men include such things as rainsing good cotton, riding well, shooting straight, dancing lightly, and squiring ladies with elegance and carrying liquor like a gentleman. Brought up in such an environment, Scarlett is actually a representative of Southern women who are deeply influenced by Southern culture.Scarlett shares dissemblance, an essential trait of Southern Womanhood, with the other girls. Thanks to her mother‟s and Mammy‟s continuous admonition and harping, she becomes a fairly beautiful, sweet and demure girl. Men have a common interest in appreciating the beauty, sweetness and demureness of a girl. Scarlett‟s beauty is partially inborn and partially acquired, but her sweetness and demureness are chiefly achieved by means of dissemblance. Scarlett understands of how to dissemble her own true feelings is even better than that of other girls. Scarlett‟s “manners had been imposed upon her by her mother‟s gentle admonitions and the sterner discipline of her Mammy, her eyes were her own” (p.5). Her mother Ellen does not realize that it is only a veneer, for Scarlett always shows her best face to her mother, concealing her escapades, curbing her temper and appearing as sweet as she can. She is utterly willing to pretend to be sweet and demure in order to succeed in catching her beloved Ashley as her husband.2.3.2 Scarlett the Rebellious GirlThe woman chained to her household tasks has known as a girl that it is the first duty of a girl to get married. However from the outset, Scarlett challenges the conventions of her society. A tomboy who can ride horses, throw stones and climb trees as well as any make companion, by 1861 she has evolved into a typical young lady only under the insistent instruction of her mother Ellen and her Mammy. Scarlett seems femininity remains merely a superficial shell, embodying outward signs, but arising from no genuine inner grace. Most of her natural impulses are unladylike. She pretends to look sweet, charming and giddy, but she is in reality rebellious, self-willed and vain.Scarlett is fond of love and marriage just like other girls and she can pretend to suppress her true feelings successfully. Actually Scarlett never ceases to seek to air her feelings openly, whatever the consequences or the chaos she may create. In the old South, arranged marriages are widespread.A girl is expected to find a marriageable man and she has to accept the husband chosen by her parents. Gerald O‟Hara (father) insists that “the best marriages are when the parents choose for the girl” (p.39) and that she should marry one of the Tarleton twins. The clever and rebellious girl goes so far as to demand freedom in love and she is not satisfied with the future husband chosen by her father. When she comes back, she quickly makes full preparation for her great purpose of catching Ashley right on the following afternoon. A minute description of her feelings is provided to strengthen her longing for Ashley‟s love. Unlike the common girls, she is determined to act on her own wishes. Thus, while her rivals retire according to the convention of the submissive female, she slips downstairs retire according to the convention of the submissive female, she slips downstairs to confront Ashley in the belief that he will not be able to resist her assault. Though her love is declined by Ashley, her efforts to obtain her true love do not wither away even in adversity. As we can see in the later chapters, if she has no love for Ashley, she will have been discouraged in adversity and will not have lived through so many difficulties to obtain financial independence.The very obvious is her disregard for religion, and indispensable element in Southerners‟ life. At prayer time in the evening before the ball, while all the other family members and the blacks are praying piously and asking Holy Mary to forgive their sins. Scarlett is so absent-minded that she neglects to make any responses, causing her mother to look at her reprovingly. Ever since childhood, prayer time is a moment for adoration of her mother Ellen, rather than Holy Mary. To the pious people, it is sacrilegious to show any indication of irreligion. Her heart goes up to God in sincere thankfulness only when a pathway for her has been opened to the arms of Ashley. In other circumstances, God is not important or sacred to her at all. As a matter of fact, her irreligion is more and more apparent in the following years of her life. In Chapter XXX, everything is unfavorable to her, because her mother is dead, her father in a state of dementia, and her two sisters ill. She is annoyed to see her sister Carreen always on her knees by her bed praying for a better life. Scarlett‟s God is a bargaining God.Compare with God, Scarlett trust more herself, in her eyes the God is an absentee God. “The Lord stopped thinking about us years ago, and don‟t go telling me Mother is turning in her grave to hear me say it either” (p.542). As we can find in the later chapters, every time she does odious or unethical deeds in order to protect her own life, Tara, or the lives of those for whom she is responsible, Scarlett repeats to herself an important motto: “I‟ll think about it tomorrow.” This motto becomes her survival mechanism and justifies every future decision she makes. Owing to her irreligion, it is not unusual for her not to bother about things that do not matter, such as the expectations and civilities of the Old South. But though she is so perseverance and so brave, at some time she also afraid of God. When her conscience torments her over the cold, bald way in which she has used Frank Kennedy, her second husband, who is later killed in an attack to r evenge her, she sighs to herself, “Oh, if only God did not seem so furious and vengeful! If only the minutes did not go by so slowly and the house were not so still. If only she were not so alone” (p.804) When she confides her fear and remorse to Rhett But ler, “I‟m afraid I‟ll die and go to hell” (p.808)2.4 The SummaryIn the period before war, Scarlett was a little girl only worried about her love fairs, she had no ideas about the war,“You know there isn‟t going to be any war,” said Scar lett, bored. “It‟s all just talk. Why, Ashley Wilkes and his father told Pa just last week that our commissioners in Washington would come to—to—an—amicable agreement with Mr. Lincoln about the Confederacy. And anyway, the Yankees are too scared of us to fight. There w on‟t be any war, and I‟m tired of hearing about it.”(Margaret, 1973: 36 p.25)As we can see, Scarlett didn‟t believe there will going to be any war, she was really boring about it, what she reply to the twins who were excitedly talking about the war is only making a mouth of bored impatience. Being a charming young lady of the old South, Scarlett cares more about the coming barbecues party, how she looks, her new green flowered-muslin dress, and of course her deeply loved prince Ashley.Of course the elegant and leisure life make her selfish and vanity. For love Scarlett is stubborn and wayward. She had a romantic emotion to love. But, at that time, ladies and gentlemen‟s demeanor formed the atmosphere of the traditional society. Her parents want to make her a lady, a traditional one, but to Scarlett, it is really a disaster, in front of her parents, she could bear to pretend, but she went her own way at other times, that‟s her, a real Scarlett, an very proud own, extremely conceited but very charming Scarlett. So no surprising that all the young men loves her, include Rhett Butler. In his eyes, Scarlett is not very beautiful, not very graceful, and even a little veining, but it‟s just this woman attacked his heart, this strong will and cat like woman.Chapter Two the Period in the War3.1 The Plot SummaryThe Civil War broke out, and also, the difficult life begins. Scarlett‟s husband died soon after he has to join the war for suffering of fever, at the same time the south army was continually retreating in defeat. But these had not made Scarlet feel sad, the very thing that brought her great sadness was Ashley also decided to join the war, what‟s worse, at that time, both Scarlett and Melanie were pregnant. With out their husbands, the two young ladies have draped into a really difficult and dangerous situation. Scarlett is much more strong and healthy than Melanie. Scarlett gave birth to the baby smoothly, but Melanie was in a very dangerous situation, at this very moment of crisis Scarlett did n‟t give up to help Melanie, for she had agreed to take care of Melanie when Ashley was out to war. Luckily Melanie out of danger soon, and also the two girls were became good friends. They decided facing with the difficulties together. They came back to S carlett‟s home, the big Tara. Rhett helped them all the way, but he decided to join the war as soon as they will arrive at Tara. Scarlett can not accept this,Scarlett: Oh, yes, yes! I know we can get through, Rhett. I‟m sure we can. Rhett: Not we, my dear, you, I‟m leaving you here.Scarlett: You are what? Rhett, where are you going?Rhett: I‟m very serious, Scarlett. I‟m going to join up with our brave lads in grey.Scarlett: But they are running away?Rhett: Oh, no. They'll turn and make a last stand if know anything about them. And when they do, I'll be with them. I'm a little latebut "better late than...Scarlett: Rhett, you must be joking!Rhett: Selfish to the end, aren't you? Thinking only of your own precious hide with never a thought for the noble cause.Scarlett: Rhett! How could you do this to me? And why should you go now that, after it's all over, and I need you! Why? Why? Rhett: Why? Maybe it's because I've always had a weakness for lost causes... Once they're really lost... Or, maybe, maybe I'mashamed of myself. Who knows?Scarlett: You should die of shame to leave me here alone and helpless! Rhett: You, helpless? Heaven help the Yankees if they capture you... Now climb down here, I want to say goodbye.Scarlett: No.Rhett: Climb down!Scarlett: Oh, Rhett, please, don't go! You can't leave me! Please! I'll never forgive you!Rhett: I'm not asking you to forgive me. I'll never understand or forgive myself. And if a bullet gets me, so help me, I'll laugh at myselffor being an idiot. But there is one thing I do know. And that isthat I love you, Scarlett. In spite of you and me and the wholesilly world going to pieces around us... I love you. Because we'realike. Bad lots both of us... selfish and shrewed, but able to lookthings in the eyes and call them by their right names.Scarlett: Don't hold me like that!Rhett: Scarlett, look at me. I love you more than I've ever loved any woman. And I've waited longer for you than I've ever waited forany woman.Scarlett: Let me alone.Rhett: Here's a soldier of the South who loves you, Scarlett, wants to feel your arms around him, wants to carry the memory of your kissesinto battle with him. Never mind about loving me. You are awoman sending a soldier to his death, with a beautiful memory...Scarlett, kiss me... Kiss me once.Scarlett: You low-down, cowardly, nasty thing, you! They were right...Everybody was right... You, you are not a gentleman!Rhett: A minor point, at such a moment... Here. If anyone lays a hand on this nag, shoot him, but don't make a mistake and shoot the nag.Scarlett: Oh, go on. I want you to go! I hope a cannon ball lands slap on you! I hope you're blown into a million pieces! I...Rhett: Never mind the rest. I follow your general idea. And when I'm dead on the altar of my country, I hope your conscience hurts you.Goodbye, Scarlett… (Victor Fleming, 1941, movie)Rhett disappeared at the end of the road, without his help, Scarlett feel lonely and scared, but she didn‟t give up, what she agrees was, “ I will make is, mother will help me…”Arriving home at Tara, Scarlett finds the house ruined, the food gone, the crops burned, most of the slaves run off, her mother dead, her father with dementia, and her two sisters sick with typhoid. Desperate for food, she walks to Twelve Oaks only to find it burned to the ground. Hunting around, she finds some vegetables in the gardens of the slave quarters, but becomes ill when she tries to eat them. After she recovers, she swears that once the war is over, she will never be hungry again, and takes strength from this vow. She grasps the reins of authority and tries to turn the place around. She finds that some of her neighbors were out of the path of the Yankees and they share with her all that they can spare…after a few days, their life became a little better, but still hard. Scarlett forces her family and the slaves to tend fields and pick cotton, every member in the family afraid of her, but Melanie gave her totally understanding, and helped her a lot.During the war, Ashley joined the war and soon lost all his information. Rhett abandons Scarlett and Melanie on the road back to Tara to fight for the South. Without their help scarlet shouldered all the responsibilities by her own and lived indomitably…3.2Scarlett’s Capability of Changing with TimesIt is obviously that the North is much more stronger than the South, the North has more stronger weapon, more people, more skillful technology, earlier or later, they will win, but many southerners do not accept the fact, and they fail to realize that their ideal is out of date and must be remolded to correspond to the new conditions of the socialenvironment. However, Scarlett is wiser and more flexible in the new environment. Unlike her sisters, she didn‟t stay in the sad ness of war, but work hard to live better, she knew that she was no longer the princess of Tara. When every Southerner give up include Ashley, she didn‟t, she knew deeply that her old way of life in Tara can not survive in the new world. No longer an idle and pampered girl as she has been in Tara, she has to spend much time in nursing the wounded and rolling the bandages for the South. Before the War, she lives at Tara, trying to adhere to old Southern values. In Atlanta, she begins to defy the rules that society has impressed upon her since her birth. She makes a bold move and dances in public as a widow, which marks her first step in defiance of Atlanta‟s social expectations. In the war time, Scarlett lived no more like the life she lived before the war, she shouldered the responsibility to take care of Melanie, and also shouldered all the responsibility to take care of all her family when she returned to Tara, her thoughts and actions change greatly, hardships in reality and changes in society make her realize overnight that she is no longer a spoiled woman dependent on other people and, instead, the other people are dependent on her.To Scarlett it seemed that at every turn she met outstretched hands, pleading eyes.After her return to Tara from Atlanta, she violates all the rules of conduct laid on Southern young ladies. On the night of the fall of Atlanta, though exhausted from the delivery of Melanie‟s child, Scarlett has to drive a carriage towards Tara. She maneuvers safely past soldiers of both camps, who may rob her of her horse. The long ride is harrowing and Scarlett emerges at Tara exhausted, but she has changed and will continue to change. She finds nothing is in favor of her. Her mother is dead the day before, her father in a state of dementia, her two sisters sick with typhoid. Without her mother to turn to for support or comfort after her hellish trip, she drinks some whisky and sinks into despair, but that didn‟t last long, she suddenly remembers her courageous ancestors who have overcome hardships and won fortunes. She is eager to give up this new found responsibility and collapse into the arms of her mother, but her mother has been dead. Scarlett can not put down this burden that she has never evenwanted to pick up. Tara without her mother needs a strong woman, and without any hesitation, Scarlett takes up maternal duties that she keeps for the rest of the novel. It is her mother‟s death that forces Scarlett to face reality and serves as an in dispensable catalyst for change in Scarlett.3.3Scarlett’s Persistent Pursuit of Better LifeAs I mentioned, the War broke out, and also the difficult life comes, the War brings Scarlett to a moment of reflection:Somewhere, on the long road that wound through those four years, the girl with her sachet and dancing slippers had slipped away and there was left a woman with sharp green eyes, who counted pennies and turned her hands to many menial tasks, a woman to nothing was left from the wreckage except the indestructible red earth on which she stood. (Margaret, 1973: 36 p.478)The War left Scarlett a ruined Tara, a dead mother, demonetized father and two sick sisters, but also the War leave her the memory of her father‟s words:“Land is the only thing in the world that amounts to anything,” he shouted, hi s thick, short arms making wide gestures of indignation, “for …tis the only thing in this world that lasts, and don‟t you be forgetting it! …This only thing worth working for, worth fighting for—worth dying for.” (Margaret, 1973: 36 p.22)The War leaved he r the red earth, that‟s enough, she thought of her father‟s words, and begins her hard work. Life is difficult, but she never thought to give up, she has a persistent pursuit to better life. She, unlike her two sick sisters, never give up to work to make their life better, without food, she went out to find it, when she got ill for eating bad vegetables, she swears that once the war is over, she‟ll never be hungry again, and takes strength from this vow. Without slaves to work in the cotton field, she herself went. Lacking of money for the tax, she kill an attacked North soldier, none of the South woman will do that.Life is still hard, but there is hope, Scarlett, like her mother, shouldered all the responsibilities of Tara, her family.。