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The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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A Crucible is a test trial, or a way to find the outcome through an experiment; A crucible can be used for many things, including a preseason scrimmage or a science experiment during science class. Arthur Miller’s The Crucible is set in seventeenth century Salem, MA, during the Salem Witch Trials. In Act One, Miller explains the panic that is imbued in the community during the witch hunt, and he analyzes the inevitable outcome of a theocracy: collapse (7). Religion and government are two opposite things and “cannot occupy the same space” (7), so when the Puritans try to merge the two, a good outcome is neither possible nor plausible. Before the witch hunt, the citizens of Salem had insufficient human rights, but as the witch hunt begins and continues, the people slowly break free from the stringent theocracy. Breaking free from the theocracy is only possible because of individualism, and circumventing the Puritan norm and Puritan law. In The Crucible, John Proctor, Abigail Williams, and Martha and Giles Corey cause a panic within the Puritan authorities and community, and wreak havoc in the Puritan theocratic government. In The Crucible, the protagonist John Proctor is an honorable character, for the most part, whose individuality causes destruction in the theocratic Puritan society. As Proctor tries to be a nonconformist to the Puritan’s strict code, he wrecks the theocracy simultaneously. The first evidence of John’s individuality is his homestead; he lives on the

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