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Examples Of Hysteria In The Crucible

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During the late 1940’s and the early 1950’s, America acted out of fear instead of their head. Author Miller motivated to write The Crucible due to his being alive during the late 1950’s when McCarthyism was prevalent in the U.S. He was trying to make the comparison of the two-time periods. Author Miller wrote The Crucible to point out the hysteria caused by the Red Scare by drawing comparisons with fear fueling hysteria, the ignoring of evidence, and types of people who were falsely accused.
One can find examples of where fear fuels and in Miller’s, The Crucible. “As the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States intensified in the late 1940s and the early 1950s, hysteria over the perceived threat posed by Communists in the U.S. became known as the Red Scare.” (History.com/cold war/red scare). Miller used fear fueling hysteria from Act III when the girls, led by Abigail, accuse Mary Warren of witchcraft to prevent her from testifying against them. Though multiple people (including Mary) have claimed that the witchcraft accusations are false, the court refuses to be swayed. Although these actuations were false many suspected the people anyway due to the wide spread hysteria. Arthur Miller’s depiction of the Red Scare further explains his side of this situation.
During the time of 1940’s -50’s of the Red Scare and in Miller’s, The Crucible, people of authority ignored the evidence that would have dismissed the charges of being a communist or a witch. An

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