Sunday, March 22, 2020
The Crucible Arthur Miller Essays - Salem Witch Trials, The Crucible
  The Crucible Arthur Miller    The Crucible    Arthur Miller    Introduction    Arthur Miller was an American playwright  who was born in 1915. He grew up in New York to a Jewish family.    He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1938 where he began to  distinguish himself as a playwright. His first plays were Honors  at Dawn (1936) and No Villain (1937) which won the University of Michigan    Hopwood Awards. His Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer prize in    1949. Miller wrote The Crucible in 1953 during the McCarthy period  when Americans were accusing each other of Pro-Communist beliefs.    Many of Miller's friends were being attacked as communists and in 1956,    Miller himself was brought before the House of Un-American Activities Committee  where he was found guilty of beliefs in communism. The verdict was  reversed in 1957 in an appeals court. Miller married Marylin Monroe  in 1956 but divorced her in 1961.    The Crucible is set against the  backdrop of the mad witch hunts of the Salem witch trials in the late 17th  century. It is about a town, after accusations from a few girls,  which begins a mad hunt for witches that did not exist. Many townspeople  were hanged on charges of witchcraft. Miller brings out the absurdity  of the incident with the theme of truth and righteousness. The theme  is conveyed through the struggles of Miller's main character, John Proctor.    Summary    Act one begins with Reverend Parris  praying over her daughter, Betty Parris, who lies unconscious on her bed.    Through conversations between Reverend Parris and his niece Abigail Williams,  and between several girls, the audience learns that these girls, including    Abigail and Betty, were engaged in occultic activities in the forest lead  by Tituba, Parris' slave from Barbados. Parris caught them and jumped  from a bush startling the girls. Betty fainted and had not recovered.    During this session, Abigail drank chicken blood to kill Elizabeth Proctor.    She tells the girls that she will kill anyone who mutters a word about  what happened. The townspeople do not know exactly what the girls  were doing but there are rumors of witchcraft.    John Proctor enters the room where    Betty lies faint. Abigail is still in there and she tries to seduce  him. Proctor is a farmer who has had an affair with Abigail a while  ago, but now he wants to forget it.    Reverend John Hale is summoned to  look upon Betty and the research the incident. He is an expert in  occultic phenomena and he is eager to show his knowledge. He questions    Abigail who accuses Tituba as being a witch. Tituba, afraid of being  hanged, confesses faith in God and accuses Goody Good and Goody Osborne  of witchcraft. Abigail and Betty, who has woken up, claim to have  been bewitched and confess faith in God. They name several other  people whom they claim they saw with the Devil.    Act two begins eight days after  the discussion at Parris' house. Between act one and act two, Deputy    Governor Dansforth came to Salem to oversee the court proceedings.    Fourteen people have been arrested for witchcraft, and there is talk of  hanging. Elizabeth Proctor asks John to go to the court and testify  against Abigail and the other girls. John doesn't want to get involved.    There is tension between Elizabeth and John since Elizabeth has not forgiven    John for the affair. Marry Warren enters. She was in court  testifying against the townspeople. She gives Elizabeth a doll which  she has made in court. In the middle of their discussion, Hale enters  to question John and Elizabeth, suspicious of witchcraft. Later,    Giles Corey and Francis Nurse enter to seek advice after both their wives  had been arrested. Next, the marshal arrives with a warrant for Elizabeth's  arrest. Elizabeth was accused by Abigail for stabbing Abigail with  a needle through a doll. John Proctor protests but Elizabeth is taken  away in chains. Proctor demands Mary that she goes to court and testify  against the girls. He vows that he will fight the proceedings, even  if it means confessing his own adultery.    Act three takes place in court.    Francis Nurse, Giles Corey, and John Proctor present their case against  the girls to Deputy Governor Dansforth and Judge Hathorne. Proctor  presents a petition signed by 91 people testifying to the good character  of their wives, and Dansforth issues warrants for the questioning of all  of them. Corey charges Putnam on inciting his daughter to accuse    Corey of witchcraft in order get his land. Corey has a witness but  will not name him for fear of getting the man arrested. Corey is  arrested because of contempt of the court.    Proctor presents his case and    
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