In life‚ emotions can act as motivators for courses of action‚ particularly the feelings of fear‚ guilt and revenge. Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible shows these themes put to use on a number of occasions. The play’s numerous characters and relationships provide a plethora of examples where the themes are employed. It is through their actions that their emotions and motives are revealed‚ aiding us in understanding the measures they’ve taken. Fear can drive people to actions of cowardice and dishonesty
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Walk Away Form Guilt You don’t feel guilt or anger for the suffering and troubles of complete strangers‚ but you do feel guilt and anger for the suffering of your family‚ friends‚ and your own self. You only care about the people close to you. This is the same in the almost perfect city of Omelas. The ones who stay don’t feel guilt over anything. Those in Omelas who stay are unjust for they feel no guilt over the wrongs they commit to the child for their personal gain. To remove the guilt they fell from
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The Psychological Effects of Guilt Guilt is not only defined as “a feeling of self-reproach from believing that one has done a wrong;” but it plays a major part in how a person can psychologically handle their thoughts‚ emotions‚ and actions. In Kite Runner‚ written by Khaled Hasseini‚ the effects that guilt can have are shown through the events in Amir’s life. After seeing his closest friend‚ Hassan‚ brutally raped in an alleyway‚ he punishes himself to deal with his shame. Throughout the novel
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Wages of Guilt‚ was written by Ian Buruma and published in 1994. The author takes a subject rarely discussed or analysed and examines it in great depth. While much is written historically about war it is mostly the epic battles that have been fought‚ the great ideas that were fought over and the effect of war on civilians during the war itself‚ almost always from the victors point of view. The main focus of the book is on the varying responses to the horrors perpetrated by both the Japanese and
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The use of guilt is an effective tool as a means of controlling people. By instilling a sense that one is responsible for certain deeds and actions‚ it makes that individual seemed tied down. In George Orwell’s "Such‚ Such Were the Joys ..."‚ the schoolmasters utilize this emotion as a persuasion device towards the young‚ gullible boys. Through this exercise‚ the schoolmasters were able to effectively control their pupil’ actions and emotions. The main schoolmasters Bingo and Sim‚ used this technique
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Lady Macbeth’s OCD and Guilt Washing In Shakespeare’s Macbeth there are a myriad of mental illnesses associated into the characters of the play‚ in particular with Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. For Lady Macbeth‚ her illness is OCD. This is an incurable but treatable illness in which a person feels like they have the need to perform a certain behavior or something horrible might happen. After Macbeth had gone to war‚ she had exhibited these behaviors performing various actions such as reading and trying
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needless death. In The Crucible‚ by Arthur Miller‚ John Proctor falls victim to his virtuous trait during the course of the infamous Salem witch hunts. Proctor’s pride is put through many tests throughout the story‚ as it sets in motion a cascade of guilt that ultimately leads to his fatal downfall. Proctor hesitates in the beginning of the novel to tell the truth about the girls’ mischiefs because he would have to testify against Abby Williams and ruin his good name in the process‚ but his reluctance
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The role of guilt in "Spunk" by Zora Neale Hurston In "Spunk" by Zora Neale Hurston‚ the main character Joe Kanty’s death is the tool used to shape the characters in her story. Following Joe’s murder‚ the characters experience different forms of guilt‚ representing Hurston’s belief that everyone in our world has a conscience. As the characters develop a guilty conscience‚ they realize just that. Bullies‚ cheaters‚ and murderers are all susceptible to the feelings of a guilty conscience as illustrated
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Specifically‚ both include guilt within their arguments. Max attempts to show the guilt of society-- that it is not solely Bigger’s crime‚ but society’s crime. Bigger was “excluded from‚ and unassimilated in [the white man’s] society” (367). He was created by a fractured society. Society deserves as much blame for the death of the two women as Bigger does. Buckley also applies guilt but in a different manner. Using guilt to display how Bigger is entirely responsible for his
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Amir guilt was eating him alive‚ and he did not know what to do one day Amir was tossing fruit up in the air. Amir was getting upset because he wanted to make it even Amir pressuring Hassan to hit him “Get up! Hit me!”[Amir said to Hassan.]” (Hosseini 92) this quote is important because Amir knowing the way he feel inside it hurts him to see Hassan face to face Amir wanting Hassan to hit him so that it relieve stress off of him Amir thinks he deserves punishment‚ and they can go back to how they
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