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Introduction to The Crucible

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1 Introduction to The Crucible
Arthur Miller and Joseph McCarthy

2 Arthur Miller Born in New York City on Oct. 17, 1915
Began writing plays while a student at the University of Michigan, where he studied journalism

3 Background of author His father, Isidore Miller, was a ladies-wear manufacturer and shopkeeper who was ruined in the Great Depression. The sudden change in fortune had a strong influence on Miller and affected many of his plays

4 AM and MM Miller married the motion-picture actress Marilyn Monroe in 1956; they divorced in 1961.

5 Plays His first successes were All My Sons (1947) and Death of a Salesman (1949) Miller condemned the American ideal of prosperity on the grounds that few can pursue it without making dangerous moral compromises (think about what his family went through during The Great Depression)

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7 The Cold War in America At the end of World War II, the United States and the USSR emerged as the world’s major powers. They also became involved in the Cold War. Many Americans feared not only Communism around the world but also disloyalty at home. A lot of Americans thought the Soviets got the atomic bomb by using spies. It was charged that secret agents, working under cover, had stolen our secrets and given them to the Enemy. These spies supposedly were hardly ever Russians themselves, but often American citizens, the kind of people you see every day on the street and hardly even notice. It was felt that a Communist could be anybody.

8 (HUAC) Congress began to investigate suspicions of disloyalty. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) sought to expose Communist influence in American life. Beginning in the late 1940s, the committee called witnesses and investigated the entertainment industry. Prominent film directors and screenwriters who refused to cooperate were imprisoned on contempt charges. As a result of the HUAC investigations, the entertainment industry blacklisted, or refused to hire, artists and writers suspected of being Communists.

9 Joseph McCarthy Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin gained power by accusing others of subversion. In February 1950, a few months after the USSR detonated its first atomic device, McCarthy claimed to have a list of 205 Communists who worked in the State Department. Although his accusations remained unsupported and a Senate committee labeled them “a fraud and a hoax,” McCarthy won a national following.

10 McCarthyism McCarthyism came to mean false charges of disloyalty.
In September 1950, goaded by McCarthy, Congress passed the McCarran Internal Security Act, which established a Subversive Activities Control Board to monitor Communist influence in the United States. McCarthy’s influence continued until 1954, when the Senate censured him for abusing his colleagues. His career collapsed.

11 The HUAC and Hollywood HUAC investigated communism within Hollywood, calling a number of playwrights, directors and actors known for left-wing views to testify. Some of these, including film director Elia Kazan, testified for the committee to avoid prison sentences The Hollywood Ten, a group of entertainers, refused to testify and were convicted of contempt and were sentenced with to up to one year in prison.

12 The Hollywood Ten These industry workers called before the HUAC to testify about their ties to communism knew they had three options. They could claim they were not and never had been members of the Communist Party (this would have meant perjuring themselves) They could admit or claim membership and then be forced to name other members (and this would have meant losing their jobs both because of their former membership and their dubious position as informers) They could refuse to answer any questions (which is the choice they made).

13 Blacklisting Over 300 entertainers were placed on a blacklist for possible communist views and were thus forbidden to work for major Hollywood studios (many of these were writers who worked under pseudonyms). Arthur Miller was one of those blacklisted.

14 Miller admitted to the HUAC that he had attended meetings, but denied that he was a Communist.
He had attended, among others, four or five writer's meetings sponsored by the Communist Party in 1947, supported a Peace Conference at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York, and signed many appeals and protests. Refusing to name others who had associated with leftist or suspected Communist groups, Miller was cited for contempt of Congress

15 McCarthyism and The Crucible
Even if you had no Communism in your own past, you could easily be in the same position as Arthur Miller- you knew someone who did. That was more than enough to get you in trouble with Senator McCarthy and similar investigators. Miller used many of these ideas when writing The Crucible.

16 Miller wrote The Crucible not simply as a straight historical play detailing the Salem witch trials.
A good deal of the information in the play misrepresents the literal events of the trial: at the time of the trial, John Proctor was sixty years old and Abigail Williams only eleven. The play is a parable for the McCarthy era, in which similar “witch hunts” occurred targeting citizens as communists rather than disciples of the devil.


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