How Is The Crucible Still Relevant Today

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The Salem Witch Trials played a prime part in history during the 17th century in Salem, Massachusetts. Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, is centered around the witch trials during the 17th century. The Crucible is a play about an unpleasant time in American history involving Salem Witchcraft. Gradually, the witch trials affected a couple of young ladies around the age of fourteen and nineteen years old. In The Crucible, the young women blame individuals they don't like for being evil witches. Miller begins the play with the “witch” Abigail Williams, whose witchcraft delirium is because of her lustful desire for Proctor. Even though Miller’s play seems as if it is just about the witch trials, he has covertly paralleled his play to McCarthy’s …show more content…

He does this by taking a dark part of history when the people of Massachusetts were overcome with mass hysteria and relating it to more of a present-day event that threw all of America into a frenzy. In Miller’s essay “Why I Wrote The Crucible”, he states that “Inevitably, it was no sooner known that my new play was about Salem than I had to confront the charge that such an analogy was specious—that there never were any witches but there certainly were Communists. . .. The more I read into the Salem panic, the more it touched off corresponding images of common experiences in the fifties.” The Salem Witch Trials began in February of 1662 and lasted until May of 1663. The Witch hunt started when a woman named Tituba confessed that she along with others were witches working for the Devil. Since the people during this time already had a fear of the Devil, Tituba’s confession triggered the community of Salem. This trigger caused a massive witch hunt, which led to at least 200 people being accused of practicing witchcraft and sent 20 people to their deaths. September of 1662 marked the beginning of the end of the Salem Witch Trials. The use of spectral evidence, which involved dreams and visions, became inadmissible. This type of evidence was the most common and easiest for an accuser to fake during this period. On September 22, 1662 eight people were hanged. These were the last hangings of the Salem Witch Trials. In October of that same year, 52 people were tried in a new court. Most of the remaining prisoners were found not guilty due to the lack of evidence, which meant they were released. Those who were found guilty were pardoned and released the following May (“History of the Salem Witch

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