 Confessing to a crime you didn’t commit in order to avoid punishment is wise.  The difference between right and wrong is clear.  It is better to die.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
Advertisements

A brief introduction to.  American playwright and essayist   Attended the University of Michigan  Notable Works:  Death of a Salesman 
The Crucible By Arthur Miller Historical and Contextual Information.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller. Witch-Hunt  How do you define “witch-hunt”?  Examples of a “witch-hunt”?
MASS HYSTERIA FRONTLOADING DAY 1 JUNIORS OCTOBER 13.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
The Crucible A play by Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
“The Crucible” by Arthur Miller Introduction and Overview.
October 5 th & 6 th.  Please print your Holt Online Essays and add them to your portfolio.
Warm Up Copy these literary terms into you notes then use page 1123 to define them: Plot Rising Action Falling Action Climax Resolution Dramatic Exposition.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
Salem Witch Trials Introduction to The Crucible. Salem, Massachusetts Founded in 1626 Most famous for witch trials of 1692.
The Crucible By: Arthur Miller. Puritanism Christian faith that originated in England during the early 1600s They split from the Church of England in.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
11/19/14 Do Now: Homework: Take out:
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
MASS HYSTERIA FRONTLOADING DAY 1 JUNIORS 11H SWBAT …gather background information on The Crucible.
The Crucible by Arthur Miller When History and Literature Collide.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
SAT Warm-Up: Pronoun Patrol You and ________ will rule the world. (I/me) If anyone deserves recognition for their contribution, it is ___________. (they/them)
Warm Up: English January CogentIntrepidOpulentTactEphemeral  After finals were over, they treated themselves to well-deserved ________________.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
Fire! Herb Block’s History Political cartoons from the McCarthy Era.
By Arthur Miller The Crucible The Crucible When History and Literature Collide.
MCCARTHYISM/RED SCARE INTRODUCTION The Crucible. Get out a piece of paper… Copy each statement and write “Agree” or “Disagree” after each statement based.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller... When History and Literature Collide.
C THE CRUCIBLE Ms. Fynan English 2. Puritans Why did the Puritans come to America? To escape religious persecution What did the Puritans do during the.
. . . When History and Literature Collide
Lecture on Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
American Drama Drama is probably the most difficult form of writing.
The Crucible Ms. Fynan English 2.
Anticipation Guide 1.It is wise to confess to a crime you didn't commit if it lets you avoid a punishment. (Example: Your parents think you lied to them...but.
Salem Witch Trials English 11 Ms. Norris.
The Crucible by Arthur Miller
Monday, August 31st and Tuesday, September 1st American Literature
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
When history and literature collide
Demographers and anthropologists have corrected the notion that European explorers in North America entered a territory by showing that the land.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
When History and Literature collide…
McCarthyism and Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
Crucible Notes.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
Presentation transcript:

 Confessing to a crime you didn’t commit in order to avoid punishment is wise.  The difference between right and wrong is clear.  It is better to die for what you believe in rather than to lie to save your life.  It’s more difficult to forgive yourself if the person you have hurt doesn’t forgive you.  Courage means doing something even though it can be difficult and fearsome.  A person is innocent until proven guilty.  Justice is best determined in a court of law.

By: Arthur Miller

 Drama has many of the same types of characters that are found in fiction. ◦ The protagonist is the central character of the play. This character is at the center of the conflict and often undergoes radical changes during the course of the play. ◦ The antagonist often opposes the protagonist, giving rise to the central conflict of the play. ◦ Some plays also include a foil, a minor character who provides a striking contrast to another character. Interplay among these characters heightens the dramatic tension as the play develops. The names of all a play’s characters are listed in the cast of characters at the beginning of the play.

Speech Devices  In drama, the playwright develops the story line through the characters’ actions and dialogue. Virtually everything of consequence—from the plot details to the character revelations—flows from dialogue, or conversation between characters.  Other speech devices used by playwrights include ◦ Monologue: a long speech spoken by a single character to the audience or another character ◦ Soliloquy: a reflective speech in which a character speaks his or her private thoughts aloud, unheard by other characters ◦ Aside: a short speech or comment that is delivered by a character to the audience but is not heard by other characters who are present

 Christian faith that originated in England in the early 1600s.  Puritans believed in predestination.  They split from the Church of England in  Many emigrated to the American colonies.  Their radical beliefs flourished in the new world.

 Like all Puritans, the residents of Salem Village believed in witches and in witchcraft.  They believed that witchcraft was “entering into a compact with the devil in exchange for certain powers to do evil.”  They considered witchcraft both a sin and a crime; it was a very serious accusation, which was carefully and thoroughly investigated.  The witchcraft hysteria began in Salem, Massachusetts, in early  Reverend Samuel Parris’s daughter and Abigail Williams started having fits of convulsion, screaming, and hallucination. ◦ A doctor examined the girls and concluded that they only explanation for these bizarre behaviors was witchcraft.

 During the next eight months of terror, more than 150 people were imprisoned for witchcraft.  By the time court was dismissed, 27 people had been convicted, 19 hanged, and 1 pressed to death.  The hysteria that snowballed in Salem reveals how deep the belief in the supernatural ran in colonial America.

 allegory: The device of using character and/or story elements symbolically to represent an abstraction in addition to the literal meaning. In some allegories, for example, an author may intend the characters to personify an abstraction like hope or freedom. The allegorical meaning usually deals with moral truth or a generalization about human existence.

 McCarthyism is the term used to describe a period of intense suspicion in the United States during the early 1950s.  It began when Senator Joseph McCarthy, a U.S. senator from Wisconsin, claimed that communists had infiltrated the Department of State.  A special House Committee on Un-American Activities was formed to investigate allegations of communism.  During this period, people from all walks of life became the subjects of aggressive “witch hunts” based on inconclusive, questionable evidence.

 Persons accused of being communists were often denied employment in both the public and private sector.  In the film industry alone, over 300 actors, writers, and directors were denied work in the U.S.  American writer, Arthur Miller, was one of those alleged to have been “blacklisted.”

 American playwright and writer  In 1953 he wrote The Crucible, which uses the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 to attack the anti-communist “witch hunts” of the 1950s.  He believed the hysteria surrounding the witchcraft trials in Puritan New England paralleled the climate of McCarthyism – Senator Joseph McCarthy’s obsessive quest to uncover communist party infiltration of American institutions.  He refused to give information regarding his colleagues and was found guilty of contempt of the court. His sentence was later overturned.

 allegory: The device of using character and/or story elements symbolically to represent an abstraction in addition to the literal meaning. In some allegories, for example, an author may intend the characters to personify an abstraction like hope or freedom. The allegorical meaning usually deals with moral truth or a generalization about human existence.  ambiguity: The multiple meanings, either intentional or unintentional, of a word, phrase, sentence, or passage.  antecedent: The word, phrase, or clause referred to by a pronoun. The AP language exam occasionally asks for the antecedent of a given pronoun in a long, complex sentence or in a group of sentences. A question from the 2001 AP test as an example follows: ◦ “But it is the grandeur of all truth which can occupy a very high place in human interests that it is never absolutely novel to the meanest of minds; it exists eternally, by way of germ of latent principle, in the lowest as in the highest, needing to be developed but never to be planted.” ◦ The antecedent of “it” (bolded) is...? [answer: “all truth”]

 Handout  Quiz next class!

 Confessing to a crime you didn’t commit in order to avoid punishment is wise.  The difference between right and wrong is clear.  It is better to die for what you believe in rather than to lie to save your life.  It’s more difficult to forgive yourself if the person you have hurt doesn’t forgive you.  Courage means doing something even though it can be difficult and fearsome.  A person is innocent until proven guilty.  Justice is best determined in a court of law.

By: Arthur Miller

 Drama has many of the same types of characters that are found in fiction. ◦ The protagonist is the central character of the play. This character is at the center of the conflict and often undergoes radical changes during the course of the play. ◦ The antagonist often opposes the protagonist, giving rise to the central conflict of the play. ◦ Some plays also include a foil, a minor character who provides a striking contrast to another character. Interplay among these characters heightens the dramatic tension as the play develops. The names of all a play’s characters are listed in the cast of characters at the beginning of the play.

Speech Devices  In drama, the playwright develops the story line through the characters’ actions and dialogue. Virtually everything of consequence—from the plot details to the character revelations—flows from dialogue, or conversation between characters.  Other speech devices used by playwrights include ◦ Monologue: a long speech spoken by a single character to the audience or another character ◦ Soliloquy: a reflective speech in which a character speaks his or her private thoughts aloud, unheard by other characters ◦ Aside: a short speech or comment that is delivered by a character to the audience but is not heard by other characters who are present

 Christian faith that originated in England in the early 1600s.  Puritans believed in predestination.  They split from the Church of England in  Many emigrated to the American colonies.  Their radical beliefs flourished in the new world.

 Like all Puritans, the residents of Salem Village believed in witches and in witchcraft.  They believed that witchcraft was “entering into a compact with the devil in exchange for certain powers to do evil.”  They considered witchcraft both a sin and a crime; it was a very serious accusation, which was carefully and thoroughly investigated.  The witchcraft hysteria began in Salem, Massachusetts, in early  Reverend Samuel Parris’s daughter and Abigail Williams started having fits of convulsion, screaming, and hallucination. ◦ A doctor examined the girls and concluded that they only explanation for these bizarre behaviors was witchcraft.

 During the next eight months of terror, more than 150 people were imprisoned for witchcraft.  By the time court was dismissed, 27 people had been convicted, 19 hanged, and 1 pressed to death.  The hysteria that snowballed in Salem reveals how deep the belief in the supernatural ran in colonial America.

 allegory: The device of using character and/or story elements symbolically to represent an abstraction in addition to the literal meaning. In some allegories, for example, an author may intend the characters to personify an abstraction like hope or freedom. The allegorical meaning usually deals with moral truth or a generalization about human existence.

 McCarthyism is the term used to describe a period of intense suspicion in the United States during the early 1950s.  It began when Senator Joseph McCarthy, a U.S. senator from Wisconsin, claimed that communists had infiltrated the Department of State.  A special House Committee on Un-American Activities was formed to investigate allegations of communism.  During this period, people from all walks of life became the subjects of aggressive “witch hunts” based on inconclusive, questionable evidence.

 Persons accused of being communists were often denied employment in both the public and private sector.  In the film industry alone, over 300 actors, writers, and directors were denied work in the U.S.  American writer, Arthur Miller, was one of those alleged to have been “blacklisted.”

 American playwright and writer  In 1953 he wrote The Crucible, which uses the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 to attack the anti-communist “witch hunts” of the 1950s.  He believed the hysteria surrounding the witchcraft trials in Puritan New England paralleled the climate of McCarthyism – Senator Joseph McCarthy’s obsessive quest to uncover communist party infiltration of American institutions.  He refused to give information regarding his colleagues and was found guilty of contempt of the court. His sentence was later overturned.

Dramatic Structure: The internal structure of The Crucible demonstrates a different pattern of pace and climax in each act and unifies all four by interweaving John Proctor’s personal history with the fate of Salem village. Rapid entrances and exits create an atmosphere of anxiety and turmoil.

Miller creates very believable dialogue for his seventeenth-century Puritans. Partly based on what he found in the Salem records, most of it is his own invention. It is convincingly old-fashioned, without being hard to understand. It is a language that carries echoes of the King James Bible, but word by word, apart from a few archaic terms- such as “harlot” and “poppet”- the vocabulary is essentially modern.

 Miller achieves his effects by linking words in an unusual way, using double negatives, changing verb tenses, and other devices of the same kind.  Within his shared language, Miller varies the way his characters speak to suit their background and personality. Ministers and judges naturally use more elaborate phrases than villagers.  Most characters use simile and metaphor  Be annotating within your text. Highlight all these examples and devices

Political cartoons from the McCarthy Era

 In the aftermath of World War II, Americans reacted with dismay as relations between the United States and the Soviet Union deteriorated, the Russians imposed communist control over much of Eastern Europe, and China was on the verge of going communist.  People worried that communists might try to subvert schools, labor unions, and other institutions.

 Government agencies and private groups began to look for evidence of subversive activity. In this climate of fear and suspicion, the House Committee on Un-American Activities, which Herb Block had opposed since its inception in the 1930s, became active.  In 1950, a young senator from Wisconsin, Joseph McCarthy, seeking political gain, began a well-publicized campaign using smear tactics, bullying and innuendo to identify and purge communists and "fellow travelers" in government.

 Herb Block recognized the danger to civil liberties posed by such activities and warned of them in his work.  He coined the phrase "McCarthyism" in his cartoon for March 29, 1950, naming the era just weeks after Senator McCarthy's spectacular pronouncement that he had in his hand a list of communists in the State Department.  His accusations became headline news, vaulting him into the national political spotlight. For four years McCarthy attacked communism, while in his cartoons Herb Block relentlessly attacked his heavy-handed tactics.  In June 1954, McCarthy was censured and in December condemned by the Senate.

 Your task is to look at one of Herb Block’s political cartoons criticizing McCarthy’s crusade against communism.  re.html re.html  In your Composition Journal Notebook….Take a careful look at your cartoon. ◦ Write the title (or print out cartoon) ◦ Interpret the message of the artist ◦ Evaluate it’s effectiveness (Is it effective? Why or why not?) ◦ Compare your analysis with the background information.  Current Event