In 1953, Arthur Miller wrote a novel called The Crucible. This book is set in 1962 and it tells the story of the infamous witch trials that took place in Salem, Massachusetts. Throughout this whole story we find that greed, revenge, and hysteria affected much of what happened in Salem. From Abigail Williams's lust for John Proctor, to the hysteria throughout the trials, and to Abigail's accusation on Tituba; greed, revenge, and hysteria was shown rampant in Salem during these times. I believe that greed, revenge, and hysteria presented in the book, destroyed the town and the people of Salem, Massachusetts. This book really shows how slight misconceptions of innocent individuals can create uterpandimony. Many people who were thought to be Godly…
Can you recall anyone in history who had extreme beliefs? In Arthur Miller's “The Crucible,” which talks about the Salem witch trials, there are parallels to the McCarthy era because, they were both very tense times. People were being accused of conspiring and had to face consequences for actions they might have not even done.…
Sequential to the 1692 Salem witch trials, Author Arthur Miller transcribed the mishaps and vindictive behavior in his play The Crucible, which portrays the hysteria and consternation of the town. An exemplar woman named Elizabeth Proctor exhibits the arbitrary and discriminatory circumstances. In distinguishing, unlikeness Mary Warren impersonates a girl whose hesitancy and uncertainty guides her to condemn many lives. The play depicts the inequitable mobocracy and unjustified perpetrations provoked by self-indulgence and greed.…
The overall message of Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, is that when uncontrolled hysteria is combined with ignorance, the outcome is tragic. While Miller offers his audience some comic dialogue to soften the events it does not mask the horrifying reality of the witch hunt and its aftermath. Rather, the humorous insights serve to reveal the simplicity and innocence of people living rustic lives in a God-fearing community. Several characters, Paris and Hale, Mary Warren and John Proctor, provide the audience with some comic dialogue, and Giles Corey is the most amusing character of them all.…
Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" was an allegory to the well-known mass hysteria, the Red Scare. Many mass hysterias have occurred before and after the Red Scare like Y2K, War of the Worlds, and Muslims in the U.S.…
In the Salem Witch Trials Abigail, Betty, Mary, and Mercy were the only evidence needed to get convicted in the adapted play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. It became their word against yours and the girls had all the power because they were well trusted within the community. The same goes for this news story about José Antonio Zúñiga, or known more commonly as his nickname Toño, he was sentenced to jail for up to 20 years for a crime he did not commit due to no one doing a follow up on his story and just assuming that the police caught the right guy. In today’s society there are many flaws in the legal system, whether it is in Salem in the 1600s or in today’s time in Mexico; people will assume the worst of the situation and it may not be the…
In Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, if a person was not with the court they were against it which in turn means they are with satan because the court is with God. In Puritan culture, the only choice is to believe in God and for those who do not follow God or the gospel at all or “the right way”, are punished and shunned. In Act Three, the women accused of witchery have begun to be questioned in court. The husbands of a few of the women are in the court trying to clear the names of their good women. Of these men is Francis the husband of Rebecca Nurse. Francis brought in papers signed by 91 people saying good opinions trying to to defend these women. In a quick defense Danforth says, “A person is either with this court or he must be counted…
In the novel The Crucible a woman named Abigail started a conspiracy about witches. She was doing most of this for attention. However it escalated a whole lot farther than what was expected. Many analyst believe that she did this because of her time frame she lived in. And that she should be pardoned because outside forces made her the way she was.…
Have you ever thought it could happen again? In the Crucible there were many instances that left the townspeople wondering what was going to happen next. After countless times of innocent people becoming executed of witchcraft, it scared the townspeople so bad they were afraid to speak of anything to do with witchcraft. The mass hysteria and fear seen in The Crucible is similar to the hysteria and fear seen after 9/11 because people were scared of the future.…
In Arthur Miller's tragic play the Crucible the author describes the life of puritans in Massachusetts in the 1700s revolving entirely around god, and all who said otherwise would be banished or hanged. The Salem Witch trials arose between this time and lead to an overall uncontrollable and unreasonable set of deaths in Salem. One could argue that the reason for these deaths lied in the hands of the people but in reality the fate of the victims in the Crucible lied with Abigail, a young girl in the town of salem who had relations with a well known character in Salem, this propels the story towards his eminent death and others ulike.…
In 1692, in Salem, Massachusetts, the superstition of witches existed in a society based on strong Christian beliefs. Anyone who acts out of the ordinary is accused of being a witch, and he/she will actually be forgiven if they blame their accusations on another individual, or confess themselves as guilty. Hysteria is the main idea of this play, The Crucible by Arthur Miller. Miller shows how it can destroy an entire community, and developed a theme of how suspicion and panic can lead to extensive hysteria that often can destroy rationality and public/individual persona.…
One of the most prominent themes in the play The Crucible is how hysteria can tear apart society and is impossible to think through with logic. There are many examples in the play were the witch hysteria caused for many decisions to be made out of paranoia rather than logically thinking which lead to the collapse of the salem society.…
In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, John Proctor proclaims “Because it is my name! Because I lie and sign myself to lies! Because I am not worth the dust on the feet of those who hang! How may I live without my name? I have given you my soul; leave me my name!” This quote shows both the dilemma in the Salem Witch Trials, which Arthur Miller set his story in, and the era of McCarthyism which he kind of writes about; John was going to confess to being a witch but couldn’t because he didn’t want to ruin his name for his family. He was an innocent man but died because he didn’t confess. This is very similar to what was happening during the 50’s when McCarthyism first started. Arthur Miller’s use of the Salem Witch Trials in the Crucible demonstrates…
In the late 1600's Salem, Massachusetts, the Salem Witch Trials was conceivably thought of as terrifying or even unjustified. Left and right, convictions of witchcraft were put on other villagers in Salem. Abigail and other girls, Tituba, Proctor, and others are to be blamed for the deaths and events in Salem, but Reverend Parris seems to have the bigger faults. Parris’s childish and avaricious characteristics caused the deaths of many innocent people.…
It has become quite apparent of the mass spread of witches and witchcraft. However, I do not think inquisitors and folks such as Sir Kramer should put all their efforts and forces in sniffing out witches like hungry dogs. I do believe in ridding the evil polluting our lands. Though, I am a peaceful man, and I strongly suggest another approach deviating from Sir Kramer’s zealous methods. What we need to do is separate the most heinous witches from the rest by looking into what types of witchcraft they dabble in. Those that have not killed will be offered salvation. We would lock them up in their local Church, under the eyes of God, for two months. There, they will attend mass, live on bread and water, and be blessed with holy water once per…