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Analysis Of Marilynne Roach's Six Women Of Salem

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While spring is a time for growth, newlife, and awakening, in the spring of 1692 a rotten presence (both figuratively and literally) swept over Salem Village, Massachusetts when a group of young girls claimed to be possessed by the devil and accused several local women of witchcraft. Not only was this the spark of a religious uproar in the quaint, puritan town; but a spark that lit the match which eventually convicted over a hundred innocent people and claimed 20 lives. While the true pain of these trials cannot be seen in photographs or videos, it can be experienced through the words that have been written. In Marilynne Roach’s novel, “Six Women of Salem”, she tells the untold story of six women who underwent the grueling Salem witchcraft trials, and she evoked a strong sense of empathy for the victims through her use of first person narratives and factual evidence. Through these devices Roach successfully highlighted the twisted, prejudice, and uneducated society that America was, and, in some ways, still is today. Marilynne Roach, a Massachusetts resident herself, perfectly illustrates her book “Six Women of Salem.” This is no surprise considering her background in both history and writing as she acquired her BFA from Massachusetts College of Art and continued her studies through writing articles for the Boston Globe and holding historical lecture groups for all ages. However, her primary knowledge of history lies in the state where the subject of her writing was born,

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