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The Salem Witch Trials and Arthur Miller’s The Crucible
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What do you know about Puritans
What do you know about Puritans? With your partner, answer on your whiteboard… 1. What are the TWO things they cared most about? 2. Name TWO things puritans did not allow/would not have liked. 3. Describe puritans in ONE word.
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Salem, Massachusetts 1692 Early in 1692, a small group of girls in Salem fell ill, falling victim to hallucinations and seizures In extremely religious Puritan New England, frightening or surprising occurrences were often attributed to the devil or his cohorts Witch Hunt: A search for and following persecution of a supposed witch
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The sickness spurred fears of witchcraft, and it was not long before the girls, and then many other residents of Salem, began to accuse other villagers of consorting with the devil and casting spells Old grudges and jealousies spilled out into the open, fueling the atmosphere of hysteria. The theocratic (religious) Massachusetts government and judicial system soon became involved. Mob Mentality: People are influenced by peers to adopt behaviors-dangerous
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Why might you accuse someone?
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The hysteria lasted from May to September of 1692.
Within a few weeks, dozens of people were in jail on charges of witchcraft. The hysteria lasted from May to September of 1692. By the time it was over, 19 people (and two dogs) had been convicted and hanged for witchcraft, one elderly man was pressed to death by stones, and 150 prisoners were awaiting trial. Five more people died in prison. Hysteria: exaggerated or uncontrollable emotion or excitement, especially among a group of people H
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Massachusetts apologized in 1957, and the city of Salem and the town of Danvers (originally Salem Village) dedicated memorials to the slain “witches” in 1992 (300 years after the trials)
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Arthur Miller Over 200 years after the trials, Arthur Miller was born in New York City in The relative prosperity of the Miller family during his early years ended abruptly with the stock market crash of The altered status of his family and the misery wrought by the Depression had a profound impact on the development of his social consciousness.
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Arthur Miller Miller dropped out of high school and worked as a shipping clerk in an automobile parts warehouse. Despite his inability to complete high school, he persuaded the University of Michigan to accept him as a student. Miller studied English, drama and journalism, and began writing plays in college. He graduated in 1938.
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Miller wrote over 50 works, among them radio plays, novels, articles, and 17 plays.
Death of a Salesman opened two years later in Widely considered to be his best play, Death of a Salesman won a Pulitzer Prize and catapulted Miller to international fame.
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Miller’s personal life became the focus of public attention when he married film star Marilyn Monroe in The couple divorced in
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Communism: A political theory advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs – America does not like it
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Miller wrote The Crucible in 1958
Miller wrote The Crucible in Although the play depicts the Salem witch trials of 1692, it was a response to the paranoid political climate that surrounded him. The 1950s saw the rise of Senator Joseph McCarthy, his paranoid hunt for Communists propelled the U.S. into a dramatic anti- Communist fervor. McCarthy conducted Senate hearings that were supposed to flush out suspected communists from government and other areas of American life, including the Arts.
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The policy resulted in a whirlwind of accusations
The policy resulted in a whirlwind of accusations. Many cooperated through false confessions, attempting to save themselves, creating the image that the U.S. was overrun with Communists, and perpetuating the hysteria. McCarthyism: Practice of making accusations of subversion or treason without proper regard for evidence
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The liberal entertainment industry, in which Miller worked, was one of the chief targets. Some called to testify cooperated, others refused. Those who refused to incriminate their friends were placed on the infamous Hollywood Blacklist: Those placed on this list were denied employment, based upon their suspected Communist sympathies.
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Miller was called on to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in Like so many of his generation, Miller, although never a member of the Communist Party, had advocated principles of equality among the classes, and social justice. At the hearings, he testified about his own experiences but refused to discuss the experiences of his colleagues and associates. He was blacklisted for his refusal to name names, but was eventually removed from the list.
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Allegory: A story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one
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McCarthyism Salem Witches
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Salem Witch Trials or McCarthyism?
1.Suspension of rational judgment 2.People who challenged the authority of the court soon found themselves under suspicion of guilt 3.Conscience was no longer a private matter but one of state administration
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The word crucible has a few different definitions:
A ceramic or metal container in which metals or other substances may be melted or subjected to very high temperatures A situation of severe trial, or in which different elements interact, leading to the creation of something new.
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The Crucible does 3 important things...
1.Illustrates the belief that history repeats itself 2.Through the retelling of the Salem witch trials during the Red Scare of the 50s, The Crucible helped people to understand that unless we are able to make a connection between what is going on now and what has already happened, we will let bad things happen again. 3.Shows the danger of mob mentality—the kind of thinking/action where a large number of people act on poor information or they act using emotions, rather than logic.
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Themes in The Crucible •Hypocrisy •Individual vs. the community
•Paranoia •Greed •Justice vs. retribution and revenge •Godliness vs. worldliness •Ignorance vs. wisdom •The Puritan Myth •Order vs. Individual Freedom It is also a story about the struggle between good and evil inside the heart of one man.
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