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Mass Hysteria The Crucible

Decent Essays

The Red Scare was a time when people feared communism. Investigators were hired to find spies from the Soviet Union. Due to the power of fear and mass hysteria, many people were accused of being spies who actually had nothing to do with the Soviet Union or communism. Arthur Miller discusses in an essay why he wrote The Crucible when he did. The mass hysteria from the Red Scare was very similar to that of the Salem Witch Trials, “In those years, our thought processes were becoming so magical, so paranoid, that to imagine writing a play about this environment was like trying to pick one's teeth with a ball of wool: I lacked the tools to illuminate miasma. Yet I kept being drawn back to it” (Miller 3). In saying how the thought processes of the …show more content…

In this play, a girl named Abigail accuses people of witchcraft so she does not get punished for dancing in the woods. Before the play began, it is referenced that she had an affair with John Proctor, the man of the family she previously worked for. Because of Abigail’s accusations, people are jailed and hanged. She even turns against her friends to save herself. Once she hears of John Proctor being sentenced to hang, she realizes she is in too deep and leaves Salem. Many people, such as Proctor, did not confess to save their lives because they wanted to stay truthful and devoted to their faith. The Crucible shows a time when the power of fear and mass hysteria are dominate in the people's everyday life. These are not as common or intense as during the Salem Witch Trials, but are still very present today. One recent example of mass hysteria took place in India, known as the Muhnochwa. The Muhnochwa was referred to as “India’s face scratching alien”. There were reports of a flying object spotted that would come down and scratch the faces of people who were sleeping. This caused people to become genuinely distressed and paranoid. Even though it may not seem that common, the power of fear and mass hysteria are still present in today’s

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