The crucible The point of “The Crucible by Arthur Miller in 1952” is to point out how humans go through the thought and struggles that happen when they get scared, or when something happens and someone shows up and they take the blame. They force it onto someone to help relieve their fear of what's going on, in this case witches they force people into admitting to being witches otherwise they hang. The crucible is stating to the audience that humans react terribly when one person brings a claim that makes sense to people who are scared of things going on so they overreact to what happened. This is similar to what isis does with all terrorist attacks it makes people fear them more, and it can cause a panic in the world and make them do a “witch hunt” meaning that they hunt down anyone who might be a terrorist. This is similar to what characters do in salem and then when someone comes out as a terrorist they can either get a shorter sentence for telling who they were working with or get a life long sentence for not talking stuff like that happens in the world today and it's the same way that the crucible went ahead and the girls told about who were witches and who did the work of the devil”abigail said i saw goody hawkins with the devil! Betty said i saw goody …show more content…
They do this in the crucible they have a witch hunt to make them feel safer they even call for help they have reverend hale come in to help them classify witches when putnam says to corey “i'll have my men on you corey i’ll clap a writ on you” (Miller 30). putnam says that to corey when he decides to get reverend hale to help
The fuel of “witch-hunts” is continued hysteria. This occurs because everyone is afraid of coming out against the absurdity of the hunt. In Miller’s Salem, to question reports of witchcraft was to be suspected of doubting the Bible or even serving the devil. In the 1950’s miller was inspired to write the Crucible, because many liberals had been paralysed by the fear of being identified as communist. In the essay-Why I Wrote the Crucible- Miller explains his motivation: “By 1950, when I began to think of writing about the hunt for Reds in America, I was motivated in some great part by the paralysis that had set in among many liberals who, despite their discomfort with the inquisitors violations of civil rights, were fearful of being identified as covert Communists if they should protest too strongly.” (MILLER 2) Miller wanted his play to help people realise just how dangerous and absurd it was to allow society to harm others in fear of ourselves being harmed. In modern times, this would mean for us to stand up against authority when individuals- of certain cultures, backgrounds, or races- are
The play The Crucible, was written by Arthur Miller in 1953. It is a story he wrote after his own experience being accused of communism. This affected a lot of well-known people in the United States during this time, and was considered a witch hunt similar to the Salem witch hunts. Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible about a man, John Proctor, who has an affair with Abigail Williams. She catches feelings for him and tries to cast a spell on John Proctor’s wife to kill her; this gets out of hand when Abigail’s uncle catches her and some other girls dancing during the spell in the woods. Suddenly, the whole town is living in fear of who is practicing witchcraft, who could be a witch, and innocent people are killed if they don’t confess to being witches. Overall, mass fear and panic, and false accusations are seen over and over throughout the play.
A wave of intense puritanism was ruling upon Salem by the time of our story,1692, and alongside them came various witch-hunt attempts. Backed up by religion, These witch-hunts intended to eliminate any possible threat to puritans and their beliefs. In the quest to “sabotage the devil” many innocent lives were lost. People capable of saving those in trouble, albeit innocent themselves, mostly hid their heads behind their walls, kept their mouths shut and left their ink to dry, leaving their fellow citizens to die. Reverend Hale, a witch-hunter himself, had an embodiment of the hunts and their purposes and consequences figured out; Therefore, he tried to make victims confess to things they did not commit, including witchcraft, to save their 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.
The Crucible is a play that takes place in Salem, Massachusetts during the 17th century and is based on true events. The Puritans believed in witchcraft and were gullible. At the start of the play, the audience learns some girls were caught dancing naked in the woods by Reverend Parris. They had supposedly “conjured up spirits” and this led to the accusations of the girls as witches. In order to escape the punishment, they accuse other women of the town of being witches. They say that they were approached by the devil but did not go over to his side so they are used as members of the jury.
The Crucible took place in Salem, Massachusetts and the people there were insane. There was very little margin for error when walking the paths there. Anyone could be accused of witchcraft at anytime for any reason, and there’s not much you can do about it. Keeping your head down, and not making eye contact with people was a good idea in Salem, as this was the rule in the town. This place was so messed up that judge Danforth states in court, “You must understand, sir, that a person is either with this court or he must be counted against it, there be no road between. This is a sharp time, now, a precise time—we live no longer in the dusky afternoon when evil mixed itself with good and befuddled the world. Now, by God’s grace, the
During the Salem Witch Trials, there was a time of hysteria; everyone was accusing everyone, and no one could defend themselves. What the accusers didn’t realize, was that that they all had a common motive behind their accusations, and that was power. The power in a Puritan society was only given to specific people, but by making accusations, it could be gained. This wasn’t just specific to this time period though, because throughout different time periods, power has always come with status, and no matter a person’s position in society, status wants to be gained. In The Crucible, the struggle for power is made evident through characters and their subliminal actions during the witch trials, which reveals that power is held within the church,
‘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.
The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a famous play which was written in the early 1950’s. The Crucible is a play based upon the events in 1692, which led to the ‘Salem Witch Trials’, a series of hearings before local magistrates to prosecute over 150 people accused of witchcraft. This was due to the hysteria caused by a group of girls accusing innocent people of witch craft. The play was set in Salem, Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. Salem was a very isolated and puritanical community, so their biggest fear was the devil and witchcraft. A person being accused of witchcraft was the worst thing possible in this society.
The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a rich and enticing play set in the late 1600’s describing the epic horrors and emotions through the events of the Salem witch trials. The Crucible, focuses primarily on the inconsistencies of the Salem witch trials and the extreme behavior that can result from dark desires and hidden agendas. The play begins with the discovery of several young girls and an African American slave, Tituba, in the woods just outside of Salem, dancing and pretending to conjure spirits. The Puritans of Salem stood for complete religious intolerance and stressed the need to follow the ways of the bible literally without exception. The actions of the women in
The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, was a historical play written about the Salem witch trials that took place in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1692-93. The Salem witch trials created mass hysteria throughout the entire village of Salem, which was also mainly inhabited by Puritans. Puritans had a set ideal of firm beliefs that managed how they lived. Essentially, they were living as an elect, which meant they (referring to the Puritans) had a place in heaven for the righteous acts they have done in the physical world. Meaning, any sinful acts could potentially hinder the chances of entering heaven as an elect. The Crucible, questioned everything the Puritans abided by. It questioned the basic morals of a pure lifestyle, adultery and
In The Crucible, the townspeople are afraid of witches and will punish anyone that is potentially one, even if they are innocent. “I have seen too many frightful proofs in court—the Devil is alive in Salem, and we dare not quail to follow wherever the accusing finger points!”(Hale). The people of Salem will take every chance they get to eliminate a potential witch, and all they
If someone told you that your light in your room is flickering, because of witchcraft and not the simple fact that the light bulb is burnt out, would you believe them? Well in Arthur Miller's play, The Crucible they did if something out of the ordinary happened and couldn’t be explained they turned to witchcraft. People were being accused without any proof which leads us to the theme of this play that is to not believe false accusations or accusations that have no proof. The author, Arthur Miller is trying to convey in this story that the government can sometimes get too powerful over the people and rule the people in ways just to benefit themselves. In today’s world there is a lot of debates about whether or not
People who were accused of such crimes were definitely trying to make sure they wouldn’t be suspected of witchcraft. If they were in a situation where they were getting blamed for a crime, they would drop names and say they saw Goody Sibber with devil per se make the public focus on someone else. To elaborate on the witch hunt, there were paranoid hunts for wrongdoers. People wanted names, and officials were sent to houses with warrants. An example from the story, “You have sent your spirit out upon this child, have you not? Are you gathering souls for the devil.” Residents in the communities were asking questions and were pointing fingers at people they thought were suspects or capable of such thing. In the play there was also the part of the population that was using the witch hunt trials to their advantage. They had other reasons as to why they decided to benefit from the situation along with motives. As more of the population was increasing with the belief that others were conjuring spirits, they were susceptible to the idea that some people were sending out spirits to others. As people started to accept the idea that the devil and spirits exist, people would try manipulate others and or lie to get themselves out of trouble allowing the problem to continue furtherly. In addition, there was also widespread publicity of the occurrence of witchcraft
In “The Crucible”, the author, Arthur Miller, conveys what he believes Senator Joe McCarthy is doing during the Red Scare. The Salem Witch Trials were true events, while this play uses these trials and adds a fictional twist to show a point. Witchcraft was punishable by death during this time. Once names started flying in town it was like a chain reaction, people were accusing others of witchcraft because they were not fond of them or they had something they wanted. Some definitions state mass hysteria as contagious, the characters in this play deemed it true. In this play, innocent people were hung because some of the girls in town cried witch.