The crucible can definitely be an allegory for the red scare and mccarthyism because of the events that took place, false accusations and letting beliefs take control of the world. In the crucible many people were accused and killed based on the belief that these people were witches and were apart of witchcraft. These people were often falsely accused without evidence at all and still received full punishment. In the mccarthy era Joseph accused many people of being communists. The only problem with this is that joseph had absolutely no evidence to back up his claims. Even though he had no evidence people still got in trouble and punishments included getting deported and sent to prison. It really isn't that hard to see the events in the crucible and the mccarthy era as being very similar. …show more content…
When everyone was in the court abigail decides to lie and make false claims in front of the judge. Abigail was pretending that Mary was a witch by saying and pretending that Mary sending out her spirit. Abigail was making this believable because she was acting and all the other girls were following. This acting was done in front of the judge so that he would believe that mary was a witch. She used this as evidence and everyone was believing her. “Why do you come yellow bird” Abigail said with fear this bird was not real but the other girls were pretending as well as abigail and they made it seem real so the judge would believe them. Mary gets falsely accused of witchcraft and she is then to be thought of as a witch by the others and later is killed for her actions. Abigail had her chance to confess that she was pretending but she
In order to be accurate in accusing someone of a crime, you must have the appropriate evidence to back up your story. In The Crucible, many people were accused of practicing witchcraft. The ones who confessed, were sentenced to jail and the ones who denied it, were killed. The only way they had to prove what was being done, was spectral evidence. Therefore, the only person known to tell the truth was the victim. McCarthyism involved communists, like The Crucible, those who were accused were sentenced to jail time. The parallels between The Crucible and McCarthyism are naming names, the lack of evidence, and rebellion against the government in which they served.
Response: The Red Scare and McCarthy trials show much similarity to the situation in the Crucible. One similarity that these both share is how the people were afraid of the courts because they held high power. The Red Scare was a growing fear of Communism in America that became prevalent after the World Wars. The second Red Scare was known as McCarthyism because it is an act of accusing someone of treason or disloyalty without any evidence, this is similar to the Crucible. In the book, Giles Corey attempts to defend his wife by stating
Fear was a major factor, in using allegories to relate The Crucible to McCarthyism. As in both individual times, people often disassociated themselves from any means that could possibly have them relate to those crimes. The McCarthyism era, was a dark time for the United States, citizens were alarmed at the rising number of communists throughout Eastern Europe and parts of Asia. With an obscure veil of fear, altering people's judgements, the basis of the countryś beliefs began to tremble. As stated in paragraph three, of the McCarthyism Introduction, ¨The
The salem witch hunts and the Red Scare caused big problems and death in the U.S. In 1950 everyone was scared that communism would spread to the united states and McCarthy wanted to get rid of all communist in the united states but instead accused innocent citizens. In salem 1692 multiple girls were out in the woods dancing and were thought to be possessed and working with the devil. Girls accused many citizens in salem claiming they were witches and causing the witch trials.The Crucible by Arthur Miller is an allegory for the Red Scare in the McCarthy Era because of false accusations and ruined lives.
Imagine being accused of something you never did just because someone had something against you. That is exactly what the characters in “The Crucible” were going through. The author, Arthur Miller, used the play as an allegory. He wanted to compare the Salem witch trials to the McCarthyism. McCarthyism, created by Joseph P. McCarthy, was popular during the cold war and it falsely accused people of being a communist with no evidence to support the accusation. It became popular because of the spread of communism in China and Europe. In the United States, anyone could accuse someone of being a communist and could ruin their lives. That is exactly what Miller was trying to portray in “The Crucible.” If someone accused another person of witchcraft their whole lives could be turned upside down. They could even possibly be hanged. Throughout the story there are an abundance of arguments. Most of the arguments come from Act III in the courthouse. The arguments are all different, but they all end up being the same in the sense that people are being falsely accused. The arguments that are like that include Giles accusing Putnam, Proctor accusing Abigail, and Parris accusing Proctor.
A Crucible took place in 1692 when Abagail’s one little lie causes mass hysteria by lying about preforming witchcraft. She and her friends go into the woods to dance and wish for things they want to happen, Abagail wishes that Goody Proctor would die so she could have John Proctor to herself. However, Abagail lies about it and says that she saw someone else with the devil and everyone plays along to save their own skin. This relates to The Red Scare in 1950 when Joseph McCarthy lied about having a list of over two-hundred people in the State Department who were members of the American Communist Party. He knew that everyone was fearful so he took advantage of it, this created McCarthyism and a mass hysteria. The Crucible and The Red Scare
“You’re a witch,” those words were a death sentence to anyone living in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. Arthur Miller vilifies the U.S. government and uses the Salem witch trials as a backdrop for the McCarthy period during the 1940-50’s in America. In the Crucible, Miller uses the salem witch trials as an allegory for the McCarthy trials to show the American public how the government was overstepping peoples civil rights, Miller utilizes anaphora, tone, metaphors, and symbolism to exemplify that an overstepping governing body should be rebelled against.
The Red Scare. What happened? What did people do about it? The Crucible is an allegory for Red Scare during the McCarthyism era. McCarthyism and The Crucible are both well connected through the: blaming of other people, therefore others can stay out of jail.
Jennifer Torres Ms. Wyatt AP English Language and Composition, Period: 6 8 February 2016 Woe of Fools Within his play "The Crucible" Arthur Miller utilizes hysteria, hypocrites, and closed-mindedness in order to create an allegory to 1950s McCarthyism. Miller utilizes hysteria to make an allegory for what he went through in the 1950s. The "afflicted" girls of the town shriek, "I saw Goody Sibber... Alice Barrow...
Arthur Miller wrote the crucible as an allegory to the red scare because he saw the madness he saw the fear and he wanted to shine light on the dark red subject. Using the evidence provided here it's easy to see where Humanity needs to take a step back and look for the goodness in people and judge them
The Crucible, a twisted playwright, written by Arthur Miller is an allegory to the McCarthy trials of the 1950’s. An allegory is a story with two levels of meaning- literal and symbolic. In an allegory the characters, events, and instances relate to real people, events, and instances. (“Definition of Allegory” R104). Characters like John Proctor, Abigail Williams, and the Court, represent real people like Arthur Miller, Joseph R. McCarthy and the organization created, the HUAC. Events like the puritans being brought into the court and John Proctor having to choose between staying to oppose the court or using his wife as leverage were similar to the accused that were brought in, as well as Miller refusing bribery. Instances when the court had no substantial proof were in comparison to the HUAC having no evidence and taking away the passports of the accused. Miller wrote The Crucible as an allegory to show that people in power take advantage of their authority. He wanted to teach that being under pressure and living in fear can affect the decisions that are made in everyday life and to criticize the institutions that wronged the vulnerable people during these times.
‘The Crucible’ is an allegory. An allegory is a story with an obvious meaning but if you look deeper into it, there is another meaning. In this case, the obvious meaning is the Salem witch-hunt and the hidden meaning is McCarthyism. McCarthyism started in the early 1950’s and it was governmental accusations with no evidence. Joseph McCarthy started doing trials on those he thought were communist, but he had no evidence for it. This is the same as the witch trials in The Crucible. Arthur Miller wrote this in response to McCarthyism.
Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible show the hysteria that took place in Salem in 1692. Even though this play is fiction, Miller based the plot of his play on a real historical event which was McCarthyism in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. There’re many connection in The Crucible to be considered as an allegory due to similarities themes and how the characters are being portrayed. Miller does an excellent job of portraying numerals characters used fear for benefit and they showed selfishness and malfeasance. This is also similar to how Joseph McCarthy’s oppressive by using intense fear of the spread of the economic system called communism.
Authors used their literary work to get a point across to the public in the story The Crucible; Arthur Miller used events and characters to show the similarities to McCarthyism which was prevalent in the 1950s. McCarthyism was associated with the period in the United Sates also known as the Second Red Scare. McCarthyism is very similar in the way that Joe McCarthy accused Americans of being communist and in The Crucible people were being accused of being witches. It is known that Arthur Miller wrote this story as a reaction to a tragic time in our history.
Abigail is now using religion to sway a judges opinion. Saying that he is agreeing with Mary because his mind is being twisted by the devil, by a new idea. This causes the judge to hesitate on