Self Identity In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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Discovering who one is a journey that can last a lifetime. One doesn 't just wake up one morning with sudden understanding of who they are; no that realization comes with ties that are very deeply interwoven with what one owns. You start building your own identity upon the foundation of your background, your type of lifestyle and the success of your family. The person you are blossoming is very heavily dependent on the way you view ownership whether you let it define you or whether you understand that it builds you but doesn 't define you. Your self identity is a correlation between discovering who you are and understanding the importance of owning intangible as well as tangible items responsibly.

One 's self identity does depend on the …show more content…

The Twentieth-century philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre had the right idea when he stated that "ownership extends beyond objects to include intangible things as well"; because the foundation of one 's self-identity is also a bridge between the intangible things that one can own and how one perceives those items. When traveling through that journey in life where you are trying to figure out who you are and what that entitles, one must likely thinks and ponders upon their perception of intangible items like faith, love, hope, fear to fully understand themselves. Goodman Brown in the story "Young Goodman Brown" by Nathaniel Hawthorne touched upon the building of ones identity based upon the ideals/morals they believed in when it came to the item of faith. He understood that he was a child of god who had committed sins and so he thought that maybe he deserved to be comrades with the devil and accept the concept of evil into his life. However by the end of the story, Goodman Brown believed in his identity and he knew that he believed in God and had faith so he denied the Devil. His perception of faith and how he owned it as an integral part of his character allowed him to discover who he truly was. He didn 't own his faith in the literal sense of buying it with a wad of cash but he owned it in the sense that he knew with absolute certainty that his faith was strong and that self-believe allowed him to journey into a new place of self-sense and self-identity. Likewise, people all

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