In the court Parris and Danforth
The courtroom is full of tension as the citizens bicker to reveal the truth. Arthur Miller wrote a fictional allegory entitled The Crucible, that takes place during 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. The source of the town’s downfall are deceitful Abigail Williams, lustful John Proctor, self-concerned Reverend Parris, greedy Thomas Putnam, and jealous Elizabeth Proctor. The sins of Salem begin with revenge, greed, and lies. As revenge unfolds the city will quickly self destruct. One of the destroyers…
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courtroom, tension rises and everyone’s threshold begin to boil as no knows what may happen in the ominous setting. Abigail and the others are pointing fingers towards Elizabeth accusing her of witchcraft causing a giant commotion giving her a life or death situation based on the outcome of judge Danforth’s decision. This is an example of the public being paranoid due to how so many people are being accused at once for no reason making them lose their own sanity. Arthur Miller’s play “ The Crucible” gives…
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In relativization to the The Crucible and it’s violent mass hysteria is that word crucible means, “ a place or situation that forces people to change or make difficult decision”. Most relevant definition because the medical situation in Salem means, “a vessel of a very refractory material (as porcelain) used for melting and calcining a substance that requires a high degree of heat” (merriam-webster). Which makes sense because an example of crucible would be a cauldron because it has the same purpose…
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UNDERSTANDING THE CRUCIBLE: Understanding The crucible within the context of the Area of Study: Belonging Arthur Miller’s play, The crucible, was initially conceived as a response to the ‘hysteria’ generated by McCarthy’s communist witch hunts. Many professional and personal lives were ruined by the hysteria, fear and suspicion generated by McCarthy’s accusations based on little or no hard evidence. However, like all enduring and greatly valued texts, the themes and characterisations transcend…
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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 to speak with one another throughout…
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the Crucible was written by Arthur Miller during an era known as McCarthyism. McCarthyism was a search, or “witch hunt”, led by Senator Joe McCarthy, for Communists in the United States Government during the nineteen-fifties. This “witch hunt” indirectly shed light upon “...one of the strangest and most awful chapters in human history”: The Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692. The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a drama of the true story which took place during the seventeenth century. In The Crucible…
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The Hard Truth Behind Proctor Arthur Miller’s play entitled The Crucible, portrays the 1690’s Salem Witch Trials. He wrote this material during his life when McCarthyism was beginning to gain it’s numerous followers to illustrate the similarities between the two. As far as historical resemblance goes, The Crucible, is relatively accurate containing only small amounts of fictional material for entertainment purposes only. John Proctor’s decision to destroy his false confession to save his life…
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god damns all liars. So in colonial Salem, Massachusetts, he damned the entire town. In the playwright, The Crucible by Arthur Miller, hysteria has swarmed the small, Puritan town of Salem. This hysteria was caused by such a blasphemous rumor of witch trials. Miller portrayed the trials using historical characters to illustrate the tension throughout the town. In Arthur Miller’s, The Crucible, grudges and personal rivalries lay the foundation of the hysteria of witches, which led to the meaningless…
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foolish girls. The people turning against one another and losing their sanity to judge like a normal human being “when you knew that people would be hang by your evidence?” (the crucible, page 45). The hysteria has completely cloud the eyes of the court which leads to many unnecessary grieving deaths. This quote from the crucible “what terrifies one generation is likely to bring only a puzzled smile to the next.” emphasize the reality that if we choose to ignore a problem then it will never stop to haunt…
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everyone you know suddenly hates you, and there’s no way out of this snowball effect. Play writer Arthur Miller used his playwright "The Crucible" to symbolize the similarities between the Witch Hunts and the Salem Witch Trials in the late 1600s and the threat of Communism, and The Red Scare, in the 1960s. Both incidents used scapegoats in order to relieve tensions and attempt to calm the people by creating a common enemy to take the blame. The lack of technology, unexplainable diseases, misfortunes…
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