The Crucible has the potential for multiple themes, it just depends on who is trying to interpret it. The message that stood out the most to me was that the most difficult thing in life to uphold is self-worth. The book shows multiple instances of characters who are asked to make hard decisions in order to uphold their morals. Some characters say yes, and they will stick to their principles and not give them up, but some say no, they will do or say whatever it takes to protect their self. Neither…
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The Crucible In the play “The Crucible” by Arthur Miller, the story proceeds in a puritan town called salem. Townspeople are embroiled in a wrangle which is a judging of a non-existent witch, however, many people died for this spurious witch. In the story, a farmer John Proctor is facing a survival dilemma, and he eventually chooses death to defend his dignity instead of shameful live. With the collision of survival value and moral dilemma, Miller alludes people to have reflection of human morality…
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Moral Ambiguity is directed towards those Characters in The Crucible by Arthur Miller whose behaviors discourage readers from identifying them as purely evil or purely good, and characters that can be identified as this in The Crucible is Reverend Hale. Reverend Hale is looked at differently through The Crucible by the reader. He symbolizes one of Miller's views of persecution and Reverend Hale contradicts this view that rips apart Salem and this makes Hales moral ambiguity a significant factor…
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Crucible Essay Justin Horton Everyone must face multiple tests in their lifetime. How one handles these tests defines the person. A crucible is an example of such tests. It is a test of morals and character under severe circumstances. In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible a man named John Proctor faces a severe test of his morals which will result in the loss of his life. In the beginning of the play, Proctor is guilty of lechery. He is guilty of this because he has had an affair with his family’s…
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Williams and Her Crucibles in The Crucible Arthur Miller is a master of incorporating multiple allusions and elaborate symbols into his text, but one of the most prominent symbols in The Crucible has to be the title itself. The word crucible has many meanings and connotations, but the one we are focusing on is the “severe test” version. The entire plot revolves and circles the idea of the characters being put through crucibles; trials, accusations, all of which push their morals along with their…
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Although the citizens of Omelas and the people of The Crucible attempt to purify society through scapegoating, their actions result in a corrupt society rather than a pure utopia. In LeGuin’s “The Ones Who Walked Away From Omelas,” and Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, the citizens use the pain and misery of innocent people to fuel the success of their own society. While the people in Omelas are celebrating a luxurious event, the child is secluded in a dark room where it is stripped from all his freedom…
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Arthur Miller’s The Crucible should be read by not only teenagers, but by everyone. Set in Salem, Massachusetts, the play begins in 1692 with the Reverend Parris discussing the rituals his niece and daughter performed in the woods with his servant, Tituba. As the prominent figure in the Puritan community, Parris was worried about his reputation if his family was associated with witchcraft. Quickly, Abigail Williams gains an extreme amount of power even though she’s both unmarried and a woman; previously…
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Why The Crucible' Remains Important Today For a story of any kind to have any relevance or meaning some 50 years after being written and indeed almost 400 years after it was set, it needs to contain themes and ideas that have been uniformly felt and experienced by people from all walks of life as well as continuing to speak to and have meaning to new and changed generations of people. Years after being written, Arthur Miller's The Crucible', still successfully speaks to numerous generations…
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Opposing Society in The Crucible John Proctor is a very strong-minded man, who is not easily persuaded. While the town is being shaken up by the lies of attention seeking teenage girls, Proctor sticks with his morals, and doesn’t fall for the lies. In The Crucible, the author, Arthur Miller, portrays how individuals stand up for what he or she believes, even if society has different views, in order to protect their morals. How does one stand up against society? While a majority of the townspeople…
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in The Crucible “There is no passion so contagious as that of fear”- Michel de Montaigne. The Crucible, inspired by the McCarthy hearings of the 1950s and based on the Salem witch trials, is a play of which clearly depicts the effects of moral panic within a community. When fear originates, it quickly catches fire and engulfs the great majority of people within a given society. This public anxiety brings rise to changes in one’s morals and societal norms. Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, argues…
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