Arthur Miller

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    The Crucible Trials

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    Arthur Miller’s The Crucible is revered for accurately telling the story about the events which unfolded in Salem, Massachusetts during 1692. Demirkaya says that The Crucible “… opened at a time when the term witch-hunt was nearly synonymous in the public mind…” (125). The play was published in 1953 during the Red Scare, and as Susan C.W. Abbotson says in her book, Student Companion to Arthur Miller, “It tells the story behind the Salem witch trials of 1692, centering our attention on the effect…

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    Crucible when people who had no connection with witches or any association with witchcraft were being falsely accused of preforming it. The book and the history from the 1950’s have many parallels, John Proctor can be seen as a representation of Arthur Miller, the author of The Crucible and the Hollywood community feared communism like the people of Salem feared witchcraft. In the book The Crucible, many people were falsely accused of performing witchcraft and put on…

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    Mira Thekdi Mrs. Ball American Literature 22 September 2015 [Insert Title] Arthur Miller’s ignominious reputation presented many conflicts in both his career and personal life. He lost money, got denied film productions, and more. In The Crucible, having a proper reputation was notably important in Salem because of the witchcraft trials, where the false accusations made in court can quickly ruin a person's life. Ergo, many of the characters in Salem are troubled about the perception of their…

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    Tragedy hero was concerned as archaic and kingly. But Arthur Miller shows us how a modern normal people could also called tragedy hero in Death of a Salesman. Also, Arthur Miller says that “tragic feeling is evoked in us when we are in the presence of a character who is ready to lay down his life, if need, to secure one thing— his sense of personal dignity” in his article Tragedy and the Common Man. By support his own idea, Miller gives the examples of Willy Loman defrauds insurance money,…

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    Willy Loman

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    Salinger 's The Catcher in the Rye to Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, every intellectual has their own piece of work they deem a staple in English literature. Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman is also in this category. A man who was a didactic and a moralist, Miller has carved a name for himself through his work (Bryfonski 342). Arthur Miller, famous playwright and author of such works as: All My sons, Death of a Salesman, The The Crucible, and A View From a Bridge, was born in Harlem, New…

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    The Crucible Paranoia

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    Arthur Miller's The Crucible draws many similarities to the events that occurred in the 1950s known as the Red Scare. During the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union, Senator Joseph McCarthy began trials to investigate suspected Soviet spies and sympathizers that were allegedly residing within the United States. Many U.S. citizens were wrongly accused and thrown in jail. Anyone who spoke out against the trials were then under scrutiny themselves, which scared many people from…

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    Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible in order to give Americans a frightening mirror to stare into, with the hope that it might shock them out of their paranoid delusion. In his reflections on his work and society, he says “Few of us can easily surrender our belief that society must somehow make sense. The thought that the state has lost its mind and is punishing so many innocent people is intolerable.” The identification of Americans resistance to accept their own mistakes shows a core problem that…

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    frankly, Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible because he had a story to tell. Being a political advocate for racial inequalities and an active supporter of labor and unions, he was often the prime target of Senator Joseph McCarthy, a man on a mission to rid the country of potential communists. Miller himself was later called to the House Committee of Un-American activities to defend himself, but refused to condemn any of his friends. This single experience, a rather blind accusation thrown at Miller…

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    Arthur Miller’s message about human motivation in the crucible is very apparent in The Crucible. Throughout the entirety of the story the characters either provide a false representation of their true self, not to mention the characters are bluntly shown in the aspect of their integrity in which a fellow Salem resident is accused of Witchcraft under false pretense. Each individual in the story is propelled by their own personal gain. Whether it be based upon saving your life by falsely…

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    Inherent in humans is the desire to strive for accomplishment in their life course. However, the fact that “accomplishment” exists abstractly within the realm of individual perception leads to conflicting translations of what defines it. In Arthur Miller’s play Death of a Salesman, Willy Loman, the protagonist, engages in such a conflict with his son, Biff. Willy, a longtime traveling salesman, harbors lofty expectations for Biff as a young man anticipating he will become a great success in…

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