Crucible Witch Trials Essay

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    The Crucible, a phenomenon play, written by Arthur Miller is an allegory to the McCarthy Trials of the 1950s. An allegory is a story with two levels of meaning- literal and symbolic. In an allegory the character,events, and instances(“Definition of Allegory” R104). Characters like John Proctor, Abigail William and Hathorne represent Arthur Miller, Joseph McCarthy, and J.Edgar Hoover. Events like the people who were hung, and people were accused for being witches were similar to blacklisted and they

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    does Arthur Miller use the crucible to represent personal experiences or voices? Arthur Miller used “The Crucible” to his advantage in the 1950’s, voicing his personal experiences of belief and religion through the characters of Danforth and Rebecca Nurse. He represented his experiences of proving ones honor and name through John Proctor and he characterized his experiences of hysteria and extremism through the girls and Abigail. Miller is using his play, “The Crucible”, to illustrate significant

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    Maddie Zinser Crucible Essay Many say the Salem Witch Trials was one of the biggest faults of mass hysteria by fear. The Crucible, a nonfiction play, was written by Author something. The play tells of a group of girls who were dancing in the woods expect Abigail. Abigail was trying to make a charm to kill Proctor’s Wife named Elizabeth because Abigail thinks she is in love with Proctor. Parris finds them in the woods and gets suspicious. This leads to the downfall of the whole town of

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    Have you ever experienced hysteria? In “The Crucible” there are many made up situations where someone is accused of witchcraft and having interactions with the devil. Arthur Miller's book “The Crucible” is about a community in the city of Salem that has many problems with mass hysteria and witchcraft. A character named Reverend Hale has been back and forth on either side, but overall he is against the witch trials. Many topics may run through the readers mind such as, How is Hale against Abby? Hale

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    The Crucible Analysis In the 1900s, there was a time period where communism in the United States was treated as an act of treason and terrorism. People were thought to be guilty even if they were only associated with communism. This was era was called the anticommunism time period in the 1950s. Arthur Miller represented his and many people’s own similar experience where they faced unfair treatment during the anticommunism time period through a book he wrote called the “Crucible.” The “Crucible”

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    While reading the crucible and analyzing other documents, Scapegoating became a relevant occurrence in communities. Societies will turn to scapegoating a group of people to place blame for a problem or event; there is evidence shown regarding scapegoating in “ The Crucible” / Salem witch trials, “The Holocaust”, and in politics. These three examples all relate to scapegoating because they all discriminate and place blame of something the community cannot control on a specific group of people.

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    individual may construe the themes of a book or story differently than another, but that is the pure beauty of themes. One great literary work is The Crucible, a play written by Arthur Miller. Succinctly, the play is about the Salem witch trials that took place in Massachusetts in 1692. Throughout the story, the townspeople indict their neighbors of being a witch and practicing witchcraft. On the surface, this historical drama has a few universal and enduring themes. Themes are universal because regardless

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    town of Salem, Massachusetts; fear and hysteria are running rampant. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, the residents of Salem are allowing their grudges and personal rivalries to distract themselves from the truth. The witch trials are escalating, more and more people are being accused, and the tensions are high. The Putnams have different motivations and grudges that are driving the accusations. Ann Putnam is using the trials to harm the women she deems responsible for the deaths of her seven children

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    The Crucible is based on the Salem Witch Trials that occurred in 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. The trials started when a group of girls claimed that they were being possessed by witches or had seen spirits. Arthur Miller, the author of The Crucible, wrote to connect it to the Red Scare. One of the similarities The Crucible and Good Night, and Good Luck have is the mass hysteria it caused. In The Crucible, once word of the witches started spreading, everyone in Salem feared that the witches were the

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    The Crucible by Arthur Miller, was written in the 1950's about the Nazi 'Witch Trials', and has several underlying themes. Some of the themes can be thought of as universal as they relate to both the time period the book takes place in and also when the book was written. Hysteria, religion and family are the most universal themes within The Crucible. Hysteria can cause confusion within a large group or area. An example of this in The Crucible would be when Marry Warren confesses to being a

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