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Examples Of Injustice In The Crucible

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“Individuals can resist injustice but only a community can do justice” (James J. Corbett). In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, injustice takes over the population leaving it almost impossible for one individual to fix the broken society. The Crucible takes place in the Puritan town of Salem, Massachusetts in 1692, where hysteria has taken over everyone and everything. Abigail Williams, a young teenage girl stirs up trouble when she has an affair with John Proctor; a well-known beloved man who is married to Elizabeth Proctor. Her immature and reckless actions along with John’s guilt leads to the false accusations of witchcraft leaving innocent people left to hang and go on trial. Thomas Putnam, a well-known greedy man in town, Reverend Paris, the prime minister of Salem, and Danforth, the head of the court only seek well acknowledged reputations and power therefore, they keep pushing these actions further and further only making the scenario worse. Fear rushes out of everyone as it was mandatory to lie and confess for actions that never occurred or hold denial against those actions and be sentenced to hang. An unfair court system along with townspeople’s careless actions and accusations leads the town of Salem to fall apart. Ultimately, justice is not served in Salem because love, fear, and power motivate the characters. Abigail Williams and Elizabeth Proctor’s love/lust for John Proctor causes injustice in Salem. Throughout the duration of the play, John Proctor and Abigail

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