Crucible Essay

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    discipline. Injustice in a society forces people to take the law in their own hands, which can cause problems within the society. Fear is what compels people to take things in their own hands when they feel there is no justice. Arthur Miller’s play “The Crucible” demonstrates a society who struggles to keep their sense of justice due to the control of fear. Fear is used as an advantage by those who had more power against others in the society. Even though everyone was fearful, not everyone seemed if they

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    the geography. Many things can be interpreted by the word geography and The Crucible by Arthur Miller along with “Geography Matters” by Thomas C. Foster found a way to express just how much geography can shape and change the way the story is told. Setting and geography have impacted everyone on this earth, including me. The way setting has impacted be makes up for who i am today and who i will be in the future. The Crucible and the passage “Geography Matters” go into depth on how geography shapes

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    The Crucible Rhetorical Analysis American playwright, Arthur Miller, in his play The Crucible (1952) implies that witch hunts still exist in American Society. Miller supports his claim by drawing parallels between the Salem Witch Trials and the Senator Joseph McCarthy Trials. His purpose is to warn readers about the dangers of mass hysteria. He uses emotional appeal and logic to convince the reader that mass hunts are still a danger to America today. The main way, however, that Miller achieves his

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    people in many different ways. It has also become a byproduct of terrorism in modern times. An earlier event where hysteria and paranoia played a big part is in the Salem witch trials. This event is described in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, the theme of hysteria and paranoia is present in the character of Rev. Parris; the development of this theme demonstrates Miller’s belief that hysteria can create an entire chaotic problem. The character this theme is present in

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    left to speak out for me.” The culture of accusations is a part of hysteria. As paranoia ensued in “The Crucible”, Joseph McCarthy made false allegations that influenced many peoples lives. An affair integrated in Arthur Miller’s play created controversy among the community. Trials were held for those accused and lying was the only way to survive. The harsh truth that was revealed in “The Crucible” and the parallels between the Red Scare and the Salem Witch Trials show patterns in which fear was used

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    Crucible Research Papers

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    The Crucible Research Paper “SUSANNA, craning around Parris to get a look at Betty: He [the doctor] bid me come and tell you, reverend sir, that he cannot discover no medicine for it in his books. PARRIS: Then he must search on...There be no unnatural case here. Tell him I have sent for Reverend Hale of Beverly, and Mr. Hale will surely confirm that. let him look to medicine and put out all thought of unnatural causes here. There be none. (I.31-34)” Betty Parris and Abigail Williams becoming violently

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    Hysteria means “exaggerated or uncontrollable emotion or excitement among a group.” During the Witch-Craft trials of Salem; hysteria tore apart communities. Many people were executed during this time. The Crucible, by Arthur Miller shows how hysteria tears apart a community. The hysteria during the Witch-Trials was mainly because of scapegoating. This is when, “power groups blame non-conforming individuals for all the problems in society, and ostracise them as witches only to take the upper

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    that “a good reputation is more valuable than money,” and John Proctor, who respects his reputation, would very much agree with this statement. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, the characters go through inner alterations of their character and motives. John Proctor shows that he has developed internal changes throughout the plot of The Crucible. Proctor’s main concern remains his reputation but it shifts from how the others in the village view him to how he views himself. John Proctor has high

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    “The Crucible” is a melancholy story about witchcraft that occurs in the town of Salem, Massachusetts which takes place in 1692. Salem is a very strict, religious Puritan community which does not tolerate any form of non-religious behavior or action. In this Puritan town, a witch hunt ensues after young female members of the community tell multiple lies to their leaders; under those circumstances, many individuals are condemned and hung for these false accusations. It is until one member of this

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    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

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