92.6k views
2 votes
In at least 100 words, describe the two settings of the village and the forest in “Young Goodman Brown.” Determine which setting contributes to the Gothic atmosphere and how Hawthorne accomplishes this.

2 Answers

0 votes

Answer:

The forest setting in the short story titled "Rip Van Winkle," which was made by Washington Irving, is developed through the use of heavy imagery. He made use of words in order to give the firest a special, enchanted feel to it, building up the sense that the forest will be important to the development of magical events to come later on in the story. As we already know, something magical does, in fact, just so happen to occur, what with Rip Van Winkle falling asleep on top of the mountain on which the forest resides and then waking up only after 20 years time have passed.

Step-by-step explanation:

Please answer in your own words :)

User Chris Hawes
by
5.6k points
3 votes

The first setting is the Salem village. The story begins at dusk in Salem Village, Massachusetts as young Goodman Brown leaves Faith, his wife of three months, for some unknown errand in the forest.

The second setting is the forest which is characterized as devilish, frightening, and dark, and Goodman Brown is comfortable in it only after he has given in to evil.

The characteristics of a gothic atmosphere usually pass in the first place for a romantic setting: dark landscapes, dark forests, medieval ruins and castles with their respective basements, crypts and passageways well populated with ghosts, nocturnal noises, chains, skeletons, demons and witches. In the case of Young Goodman Brown story, Hawthorne accomplishes this gothic genre by introducing the description of the forest and the existence of witches at that time. This atmosphere would move readers to fear and question their surroundings.


User Henrique Rotava
by
6.1k points