Salem Witch Trials Essay

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    Essay On Puritan Beliefs

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    to the point of viewing women like this would also make them very puritanical. The Puritan’s beliefs were extreme when in came to how God and Satan interacted, and also their powers. Witchcraft hysteria was huge with the Puritans, especially the Salem Witch…

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    The Salem witch trials of 1692 to 1693 were dark times in which many were convicted of witchcraft based solely on scanty and unprovable evidence. The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a fictional play written about these events. In it Abigail Williams and other townsfolk use the trials as a way to further their own means and carry out personal vendettas against others, while a few, such as John Proctor, try to expose the trials and the accusers for what they really are: a fraud. One of the key…

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    THE CRUCIBLE In 1952, Arthur Miller published The Crucible, a dramatization of the events of the Salem witch trials. However, it does not fall prey to the common misconception that the trials were simply a case of mass hysteria or superstition. Rather, the play highlights the social causes behind the deaths of the Salem ‘witches,’ finding drama within the conflicts among individuals and between the individual and society, within the consequences of extreme individualism and isolation. The play…

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    the witches of Salem to save themselves from getting in trouble and running their name in the city. Why did they choose those certain people to accuse them of being witches? The girls blamed these certain people for many reasons, which include: the girls hated these people, also their parents told them to blame certain people to benefit the family, finally the girls had a problem with the citizens whom they were accusing. These girls were held as witnesses at the Salem Witch Trials and got the…

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    Russia taking over the United States anymore, The Crucible rose on the charts and became a movie in 1996, winning a Tony Award in the process. In his work, Miller, a critic of communism, constructs an allegory to show the similarities between the Salem witch trials and Soviet Russia in hopes of opening the eyes of the American citizens who were blinded by the mass hysteria that communism caused. In the play, John Proctor, a man who has…

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    Deception In The Crucible

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    sins that affect others? The Crucibles, written by Arthur Miller, narrates a story about a small, religious Puritan town, Salem, located in the New England colonies, and the uncanny events that occur as a result of pure envy, deception, and manipulation. Strange incidents arose, leading residents to place the blame on the devil’s minions, witches. As a result, numerous trials and persecutions took place. The main antagonist and person who is solely responsible…

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    freedom. While John Proctor represents individuality, the Puritan theocracy symbolizes the repressiveness of a body of government. The most prominent representation of individuality in Miller’s play is John Proctor. Proctor’s idiosyncratic mind within Salem is not apparent to the reader until he stops agreeing with the courts and his peers. When Proctor refuses to sign a testimony Deputy Governor Danforth requests, he cries, “I have confessed myself! Is there no good penitence but it be public?…

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    Jalalzai shows that during Tituba’s Salem time she was being obligated as others to follow the rules of a person that was showing sovereignty over the town. This also shows the fact of hysteria when Tituba is also accused of witch trial because of her race. In the current legal system, the need to defend traditional power dynamic still affects society. The normalization of homosexuality…

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    situation becomes unstoppable. A society in which events skyrocket into uncharted territories is illustrated in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, which focuses on the Salem witch trials of the late 1600s. In Miller’s play, the people of Salem were obsessed with eradicating witchcraft from their society, which ultimately led to the point in which Salem was overrun with madness. Various societies throughout the centuries have experienced widespread hysteria in one form or another, such as the…

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    Furthermore, as the witch hunt draws to a finale in Act 4, it is seen how the dangers of hysteria are largely that many lives can be lost from a hysterical situation, and it is extremely difficult to stop the situation. At this point, John Proctor is set to be hanged in the morning and Danforth as well as Harris want John Proctor to lie to save himself from the hanging, and enlists Elizabeth to talk Proctor into lying. This attempt at her appeal to him was supposed to be a sentimental appeal, as…

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