Crucible Essay

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    Violence In The Crucible

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    Slapping, punching, pushing, shoving, kicking, and ultimately killing are all forms of violence that occur in a person’s lifetime. In Arthur Miller’s book, The Crucible, the act of public violence is presented. People in the community had come to accept violence as a way of life in Salem, Massachusetts. This is very much the same level of acceptance for violence in today’s society. In fact, this level of violence occurs frequently throughout the book. Community members are accustomed to violence

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    symbolism throughout The Crucible continues with even the props associated in the play which enlightens the audience with a deeper meaning; such as when Mary Warren gives Elizabeth Proctor the voodoo doll. The doll easily symbolizes the witchcraft and satanism associated with the accusations which begins to obstruct John Proctor since he was not able to prove his wife’s innocence because of his guilty conscience. Guilt versus innocence, another key symbol in The Crucible. Christian Pyle proves that

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    The Crucible Themes

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    Crucible Themes The Crucible was written by Arthur Miller in 1953 about the Salem witch trials of 1692 and is still read now. While the play has many different themes, this essay will focus on three: women, religion and scapegoating. Even though it was set in an old time period, the themes of the play were relevant when it was published and maintain their relevance today. Women Women will always exist and play important parts in literature. In the play and real life Salem, mostly the women got

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    Guilt In The Crucible

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    With the mistakes of humanity come both guilt and sins. In the story “the crucible” written by Arthur Miller shows guilt can move people to make sacrifices. Guilt has the ability to drive people to make dire choices. Many characters like reverend John Hale, and Reverend Parris felt this guilty conscience, this remorse about what they had all done., especially John Proctor who throughout the story strives to exempt from his guilt and sins. Reverend John Hale an overconfident straight lace man, was

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    The Crucible Comparison

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    The film version of The Crucible depicts the play achieving several depth by depth characteristics that are very similar to the play. The film The Crucible (1996) is introduced chronologically, comparing side by side it is very exact to that of the play. This whole film is based on one simple element and that is witchcraft, the Salem Witch Trials which killed 19 innocent lives who were believed to be associated with the Devil, and believed they were witches that had the ability to fly wherever and

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    Lies In The Crucible

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    Arthur Miller wrote the crucible during a time period in the U.S that’ shared some similarities to the Salem witch trials. Miller wrote this play during the McCarthy hearings, which is when Senator Joseph McCarthy began wildly blaming people of being Soviet spies. The Crucible is about these Salem witch trials but it also contains many universal themes and is definitely filled with its share of conflicts, but one that stands out the most to me is the constant lying and how those lies lead to even

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    One of the main inspirations for The Crucible was the search by the U.S. congress for “communist sympathizers” in the 1950’s, the era when Miller was writing the play. Those hearings were each branded as a “witch-hunt,” and audiences in 1953 recognized the resemblance between the Salem witch trials and the current “red scare.” In both cases, criminal persons were assumed to be guilty of communism but, ironically, were freed from punishment if they were willing to accuse others. Alot of critics

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    The Crucible Essay

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    cope just as easily by lying to themselves, which can establish a false reality in the mind of the self-deceiver and, ultimately, leads to fallacies in logic. Coherently, Arthur Miller utilizes his diverse cast of characters in his play write “The Crucible” to demonstrate the ease at which lying to one’s self can create false

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    The Crucible Essay

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    CRUCIBLE INTRODUCTIONARY NOTES The crucible by Arthur Miller, is a play that deals with conflicts involved in the Salem witch trials of 1692. The characters in Miller’s theocratic society are not only in conflict with their environment, but with each other and their religious authority. John Proctor sacrifices his life as he battles his individual conscience, guilt and the authority of the church. In his play, Miller shows that when an individual questions the dominant values of a society

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    Arthur Miller’s The Crucible explore the place of the individual in society? Similar to Tocqueville before him, John Stuart Mill was critical about the American democracy and its resulting social pressures on the individual. The consequences of the tyranny of conformity sat at the forefront of his mind. Frank Prochaska in his review of Mill described the term as ‘a society in which scarcely any person had the courage to dissent.’ Arthur Miller draws on this idea in The Crucible by exploring the individual’s

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