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    What is the significance of the title in The Crucible? The title of The Crucible effectively helps us to understand the play in a deeper and more thorough way as the definitions of the noun ‘crucible’ reflects the themes of the play such as moral‚ reputation‚ courage‚ righteousness‚ hysteria and truth. It also foreshadows the severe and unjust persecution of the upright characters who hold on to their beliefs and moral values‚ as the word ‘crucible’ comes from the Latin word ‘crucibulum’‚ which derives

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    The seeds of hysteria that are sown in The Crucible by Arthur Miller‚ are anger‚ fear‚ and panic. Hysteria is an uncontrollable emotion‚ like anger‚ among a group of people. Abigail WIlliams creates fear in act 1 by the strange behavior‚ everyone in the town of Salem feared her‚ and her new “possessed” attitude. John Proctor creates anger in act 1‚ Proctor was angry that witchcraft was becoming such a hysterical thought in the town of Salem. Betty Parris odd‚ unhonest behaviour creates panic because

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    The Crucible written by Arthur Miller is set In Puritan New England town of Salem Massachusetts. The town gets very flustered after witchcraft is accused. The Reverend‚ Parris catches his daughter and a group of her friends dancing around in the forest. The daughter Betty falls into a coma. When rumors are spread about the town‚ the townspeople start accusing them of witchcraft. Paranoia is set into the town‚ so Reverend Hale is called upon who is an expert on witchcraft. Parris questions the ring

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    Arthur Miller has argued for years about the historical truth surrounding The Crucible‚ and defined its trans-historical subject as a social process that includes the Salem witchcraft trials and the anti-Communist investigations of the fifties. Though The Crucible is unrelenting in its opposition to the authoritarian systems represented by Puritanism and McCarthyism‚ its use of historical material and the position on moral tyranny‚ which it projects‚ seems far more complex than criticism on the

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    The Crucible Essay Two                     1                    Separation of Church and State  Madison Marshall                              The Crucible Essay Two                     2            Arthur Miller’s play the Crucible‚ was written in a setting of a time before America  was ever established. After reading Miller’s play of the witchcraft trials that occurred in  the town of Salem‚ I have found examples as to why our founding fathers made the  decision to include a separation

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    Throughout Arthur Miller’s The Crucible‚ there are a series of prevailing questions: “Who was conspiring against you? Might you be a witch and not know it? Can an innocent person be guilty? Could anyone think themselves safe?” (Schiff 4). These questions are evidence of the hysteria that swept through Salem‚ Massachusetts during the winter of 1692 and again during the peak of the anti-communist revolution in the 1950’s. In The Crucible‚ innocent people were in danger of being accused of witchcraft

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    In The Crucible‚ Arthur Miller uses themes to display thoughts throughout the book. The theme that seems to be the center point of the story is religion. Religion is on the character’s minds with every action they do. When something goes wrong in the town‚ religion is sought out as a cause. When the witch trials begin‚ the devil is supposed to be the source of the troubles. Arthur Miller vividly uses religion to show the readers how important religion is to the people of Salem. At the start of The

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    effect upon the American society‚ much as the witch trials did upon the people of Salem‚ Massachusetts in the 1600’s recounted in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. The manner of the interrogations is extremely similar in both situations. In McCarthy’s interrogations‚ everyone is treated roughly in the same manner and accused wrongfully. Similarly in The Crucible‚ the accused are questioned repeatedly until they are broken. In Langston Hughes’ interrogation‚ some of the questions he is asked are as follows:

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    Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible is a tale of hysteria and tragedy. According to Bonnet‚ The Crucible is a complex story with dual emphasis on the individual and on society. The article “Society vs. The Individual in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible” explains that constant shift between two very different ideas. The play is constantly switching between the two poles. Both society and the individual play distinct important roles in the play‚ but the two are also very intertwined‚ and to pull them apart

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    found in modern drama anymore. “In the Poetics Aristotle defined a tragedy as a serious work with a hero who is great and good but has a flaw that brings down destruction on himself or herself” (Hischak‚ Thomas S. “Chapter2/Types of Drama.” Theatre as Human Action: An Introduction to Theatre Arts. N.p.: n.p.‚ n.d. 38 Print). Aristotle feels that regardless of being a king and having a whole kingdom look up at this noble rank the king should have a flaw‚ whether king or a hero there must be self-destruction

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