Social Discrimination In The Crucible

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In 1692 Salem, Massachusetts, a group of teen girls caught in an innocent act of love potions to catch the love of men are compelled to tell lies that Satan had invaded them and forced them to participate in the rituals and are then forced to name those involved. Thrown into the mix are greedy preachers and other major landowners trying to steal others ' land and one young woman infatuated with a married man and determined to get rid of his innocent wife. Those who demanded their innocence were executed, those who would not name names were incarcerated and tortured, and those who admitted their guilt were immediately freed. The Salem Witch Trials are possibly the most notable examples of the persecution of witchcraft in the New World. In Arthur Miller’s 1996 film, The Crucible, it portrays the witch trials from the point of view of a small community that becomes disintegrated by frenzy and lunacy. The film, emphasizes the role of a group of girls led by Abigail Williams, and illustrates how society was so strict for not only women, but even young children. This caused an uncommon form of hysterical fear of witches, spirits and the Devil. This group of girls created an outlet of their own from their reality. “The witch trials are often taken as a lens to view the whole Puritan period in New England and to serve as an example of religious prejudice, social persecution, and superstition” (Ray …show more content…

They had difficulty with defining witchcraft and considered it as separate from other forms of magic and superstition, that in the long run it causes an outbreak of persecution due to the fact that Salem was dominated by Puritanism and seen as a humble, honest, God-fearing society that prided itself on its moral values. The settlers in Salem saw themselves as God’s chosen people, and Satan was believed to be loose in these unfamiliar

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