"Witchcraft hysteria" Essays and Research Papers

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    Massachusetts in 1692. The witchcraft trials‚ grew out of the particular moral system of the Puritans‚ which promoted interference in others’ affairs as well as a repressive code of conduct that frowned on any diversion from norms of behavior. Nineteen men and women were hanged at Gallows Hill near Salem‚ while another man‚ Giles Corey‚ was stoned to death for refusing to submit to a trial on witchcraft charges. Hundreds of other persons faced accusations of witchcraft and dozens more languished

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    The Salem witch trial mystery intrigues people because it describes a time when morals flipped and hysteria flooded into the town of Salem. Arthur Miller brings these well known trials to life as he illustrates the trials in his play‚ The Crucible. He incorporated his own experiences into the story and brings new life to the characters that experienced the witch trials first hand. One of these characters‚ Mary Warren‚ historically was the oldest accuser of the Salem witch trials. She ended up confessing

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    and Arthur Miller became a victim of McCarthyism. Miller suffered through accusations of possibly believing in communism; as a result‚ he wrote a play called The Crucible‚ in which he used the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 to explain the communist hysteria during the 1950s. Arthur Miller develops an allegory in The Crucible by comparing the Salem Witch Trials to McCarthyism by using ringleaders‚ persecuted couples‚ and hypocrisy in the government or legal system. Certainly‚ Miller creates a parallel

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    Salem was one of the most popular places where witches were executed‚ because people where afraid of devil which shows the Miller’s story The Crucible. This horrible fear shaped the society of Salem and as it happened a lot of women were killed. As Dorothy Thompson said: "The most destructive element in the human mind is fear. Fear creates aggressiveness". The book which I read is the story about how the society was manipulated by the fear of the unknown or different. Therefore‚ in my opinion people

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    opinions that they might be witches. Those solitary judgments led to many peoples’ deaths. Their assumptions were wrong‚ however. All these aspects proved how peoples’ poor judgment‚ lack of truth‚ and following what people want you to believe led to hysteria and tragedy in the community of Salem. Many people in the town of Salem knew the truth‚ but because they could not stand up for the truth‚ they went along with the foolish stories and

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    Witch trials in Salem in late the 1600s create hysterical climate and lead to death by hanging of 19 innocents. Recent investigation into the historical events reveal the true reasons behind the deaths of the accused of witchcraft and of “compacting with the Devil” after several old artifacts were found. Religious extremism‚ false accusations‚ vengeance and desire to protect reputations were revealed as the true causes of the massacre. A few centuries ago‚ between the 1300s and 1600s many practicing

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    HST 402: Seminar in European History 1000 Word Paper Throughout the history of witchcraft it has been hard to establish if any of these accusations on ‘witches ’ were actually true due to lack of records and proof‚ although it now seems certain that the vast majority of women incited were innocent. In the book "The Bewitching of Anne Gunter" we can see how these allegations can be completely fabricated for personal gain and revenge. The British Isles‚ was a tense and troubled time in

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    historic event that occurred in Salem‚ Massachusetts in the year 1692 and lasted until 1693. It’s known to be a dark time in American History (Brooks‚ Historyof Massachusetts.org). It first began when a group of teenage girls were exposed of practicing witchcraft and it then lead to bigger things Innocent people were killed and others were treated poorly. More than 200 individuals were wrongfully blamed and 20 were executed for denying the accusations (Blumberg‚ Smithsonianmag.com ). To this day no one is

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    During this event a man came to the town of Salem‚ this man was Reverend Hale. Hale was crucial in the interpretation of these “satanic” works. He was the one of the first people to openly believe the witchcraft and one of the few to end up openly opposing it as well. Where the whole town fell to mass hysteria‚ believing that the devil‚ Hale was one of the few with the resolve to oppose this madness. Reverend Hale is a just and composed man who has pure and right intentions‚ he arrived in Salem with an

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    Many people in Salem‚ with a select few exceptions‚ get caught up in the hysteria and are complicit in allowing these witch trials to happen. Take Deputy Governor Danforth as an example‚ he is shown evidence that the accused may be innocent but is more concerned with the reputation of the court than with bringing justice to the town. He reasons that since witchcraft is an “invisible crime…Therefore‚ who may possibly be witness to it?” (Miller‚ 93) Using this logic‚

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