Irony. An event that seems contrary to it’s expectation. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, there are many instances of irony present in the town of Salem. The play is focused on a group of girls who are said to be witches. There are multiple court trials that attempt and fail to figure out who is guilty. The guilty often get away, while the innocent are locked up. The only way to get out of jail and to avoid hanging is to confess, even if you’re innocent. The trials end up turning the Puritan town…
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The Crucible is filled with ironic twists and turns that not only affects the characters, but also the readers and the social messages given throughout the story. The characters are affected by the irony of the play because they do not understand why some of the other characters do what they do. The readers are affected by this irony in the way that they get either frustrated, scared, happy, or annoyed by some of the actions the characters do, suggests, the characters have absolutly no idea what’s…
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doing something that you have never done? There are many people that have been accused of something they never done. The Crucible by Arthur Miller, is a story about people being accused of doing witchcraft, and people telling lied about other. There are three main theme in The Crucible, the three main theme are Deception, Irony, and Guilt. The first main theme of The Crucible is Deception. “Let either of you breathe a word, or the edge of a word, about the other things, and I will come to you…
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In Arthur Miller’s play, ‘The Crucible’ and Andrew Niccol’s film, ‘Gattaca’ both authors use the narrative to explore the idea that the need to belong is a powerful motivator. In both texts the authors create societies to which belonging is critical to survival. Miller uses the town of Salem in 1694, the ‘New Jerusalem’ of its puritan inhabitants where the bible is law, contrastingly the events of Niccol’s Gattaca take place in a future two tiered society in which science has replaced religion. In…
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The genre represented in Act Four of The Crucible is a drama play. The dialect in Act Four was mainly based around lots of tension and a very intense drama. The various spelling in Act Four was the townspeople speaking with one another, only on big, strong, faithful community knowing how to be able…
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they are nearby. A crucible is a heat resistant container where metals can be melted or fused at very high temperatures. A crucible is also capable of withstanding great pressure. Through rebellion, some women demonstrated similar assets as a crucible when they were accused of witchcraft. Abigail Williams represents her rebellion against her traditional views of womanhood and her contribution to the meaning of the work through defense, manipulation, and irony in the novel The Crucible written by Arthur…
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In the novels, The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, and The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, both have a lot of similarity between them. For example, the setting takes place in the 1700s to the 1800s in both novels. Other than the similarities, they are also very different in other ways. Such as, they may have the same characteristics throughout out the novel, but develop differently from one another. In the novels, they both have relationship characteristics that are the same but also different…
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Miller’s text, “The Crucible”, juxtaposition between McCarthyism & the Salem Witch Trials is introduced. A man in a position of great respect, John Proctor, is used to symbolise the transition from inclusion to displacement within his community. An individual’s sense of belonging is influenced by the way their personal values collide with their communal values, therefore their need to belong to their self or to their community is endangered. The characters in Miller’s “The Crucible” face the choice…
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repeating itself are in Arthur Miller's "The Crucible". Miller did not get his inspiration just from his own mind but from a period of time, were people were extremely judgmental and prosecuted people for false accusations, but this seems to happen over and over in history. For example, the event of the Red Scare which is also known as the McCarthyism. The Red Scare had less harsh consequences, but the same rippling events throughout time. In 1953, The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, created hysteria…
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The Crucible Countless times in the real world people with a great reputation have dark secrets that would tarnish their relationships and often times these secrets come out. Before these discoveries are made these people are praised by the public for their good doings. In the play The Crucible, by Aurther Miller which is set in 1692 and is based off of the infamous witch trails in Salem Massachusetts. The play itself is an allegory to the McCarthy communist hunt that occurred in the 1950’s. Christianity…
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