Crucible Essay

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    Compare And Contrast Abigail And Elizabeth In The Crucible

    The Crucible took place in the summer of 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. In this time frame the trails of witchcraft were evident around different towns. Arthur Miller wrote a story about the young girls in the community in Salem. In Act I of The Crucible Miller writes about Abigail Williams and makes reference to Elizabeth Proctor. These two women are total opposites in many ways. Abigail is a young girl who is demanding and needs to always be in control, while Elizabeth is a wife, mother to three

    Words: 610 - Pages: 3

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    The Theme Of Reputation In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    Preserving one’s reputation is a prevalent theme in The Crucible. Several of the characters are concerned about their reputations. Do you think a good name is more important than the truth? I think that the truth is more important because honesty is, im my opinion, the best quality. If you lie just to save your reputation, people may find out and then you would have a reputation for being a liar. If you tell the truth and people know that it is the truth, then you will have a reputation for being

    Words: 356 - Pages: 2

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    Crucible Reverend Hale Quotes

    Imagine you condemned 72 innocent people to death, believing they were guilty, and then discovered that you were wrong. This is the life of Reverend Hale, a character in Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible, whose actions and inactions greatly impact the lives of the other characters. In Act I, Reverend Hale appears and acts very haughtily. He believes he knows everything about witches and that he is the savior of Salem. For instance, when he says, “Here is all the invisible world, caught, defined,

    Words: 634 - Pages: 3

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    Rebecca Nurse's Beliefs In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    During this book you will see many people die for for a reason now-a-days people don’t believe in. The Crucible was written by Arthur Miller. This play is based on the events of 1692 and 1693. During this time people believed in witchcraft. Witchcraft is the belief that people made a pact with the devil to do magic. Through it all people stayed true to their values like Rebecca Nurse who stayed to her belief with God and the devil was never here. While I stick to my values through hard times

    Words: 464 - Pages: 2

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    The Crucible Movie Vs Play Analysis

    Plays and novels these days constantly have movie remakes. The Crucible by Arthur Miller had a film produced for it in 1996 which was forty-four years after the play was written. The film itself is extremely similar to the play besides the fact that minor changes occurred. Between the film and the play, there are slight differences made by the screenwriters and the playwright himself. For example in the play, it states that John Proctor “goes directly to her and grabs her by the cloak…” John Proctor

    Words: 505 - Pages: 3

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    Regression In The Crucible

    Cultural Repetition, Regression, and Variation Throughout history, the same events are repeated as groups of people deal with problems in their society. Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, was written when McCarthyism, which involved the persecution of suspected communists, was at a high. The play explores the seemingly timeless parallels of panicked groups hoping to protect themself and their own between the Salem Witch Trials and the McCarthy Era trials that are still applicable today as the

    Words: 1561 - Pages: 7

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    Moral Changes In The Crucible

    In the play “The Crucible” many of the characters underwent many emotional and moral changes. Some were affected by the witch trials more than others, such as the accused underwent many moral challenges as did the many loved ones of the accused. Out of all the characters many will agree John Proctor overcame many hardships and faced a lot of trials that tested him as a person and a puritan. In the beginning of the play John Proctor is introduced to the audience, he seems like a very independent

    Words: 850 - Pages: 4

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    The Confessions: The Salem Witch Trials

    The use of the spectral evidence themselves was the central problem in the trials. Apparitions of demons were invisible to other people in the same room and only the afflicted girls could see the shapes, which was one of the problem with spectral evidence. The possibility that Satan could appear in the shape of an innocent person was another concern. Confessions were vigorously sought to overcome these obstacles. One thing I noticed in the Salem witch trials is that the defendants who confessed were

    Words: 357 - Pages: 2

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    1920s Flappers Research Paper

    Before the 1920s woman usually worked on farms with their parents, then came the 1920s and it brought many changes for young women in the United States, they stated to decide they want to be dancers and singers and some even get involved with mafia gangs. As in the play "Thoroughly Modern Millie", millions of young women left the safety and security of rural, small town life and went to live an independent life in the big city. The flapper culture is the best example of the type of life that many

    Words: 651 - Pages: 3

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    What Does The Red Scare Symbolize In The Crucible

    Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible using catastrophic periods in history to create his vivid literature as a metaphor for alienation of the innocently accused and influenced minds of an entire community. The Red Scare connects to The Crucible by the indistinguishable missing evidence of the accused and crossing the border to a megalomaniac. In addition, Miller uses actual names and historical events from the Salem Witch hunt in the 1690s in this play. He uses these events to explain what happened with

    Words: 344 - Pages: 2

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