Theme Of Hysteria In The Crucible

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Can you imagine being crushed to death slowly by large rocks stacked on top of your chest till you were slowly crushed to death. In thea 17th century town in the puritan era, a small town called Salem was experiencing mass hysteria throughout all the reaches of the town. The Crucible, a play by Author Miller, is an excellent example to show that hysteria has affected people for 100s of years. A major character by the name of John Proctor watched as the town he lived in slowly descended into hysteria around him. Another character who got fed up with the hysteria was Hale. He left the court in a storm due to the wild accusations put in place by Abigail and the girls. The hysteria in the past can be connected to the 1980s hysteria of the daycare …show more content…

The entire town of Salem was engulfed with mass hysteria as wild accusations of witchcraft flew back and forth in the court. Everyone believed the girls even though Mary Warren and others had said that the accusations of witchcraft were false. The court refused to be swayed away from believe in the girls though. "I heard the other girls screaming, and you, Your Honor, you seemed to believe them, and I--It were only sport in the beginning, sir, but then the world cried spirits, spirits, and I --I promise you, Mr. Danforth I only thought I saw them but I did not" (67). This is Mary warren explaining hysteria to the court in her own way. Everyone was crying out and screaming they felt spirits, so she felt it too. Her mind realized that they weren't there, but the group all felt the same emotion. "She and all the girls run to one wall, shielding their eyes. And now, as though cornered, they let out a gigantic scream, and Mary, as though infected, opens her mouth and screams with them." (Act 3). Mary's hysteria is …show more content…

The article, "How the daycare child abuse hysteria of the 1980s became a witch hunt" says that "Peggy McMartin Buckey, accused of abusing children at a preschool in Manhattan Beach, Calif., testifies in 1989. The evidence was weak, and she was acquitted" (Nick Ut/AP). This is similar to Rebecca nurse being accused with no evidence. I can not say if Peggy Buckey was a woman like Rebecca nurse, but the article says they had little evidence to support the claim. A major difference though is that Rebecca was hung still while Peggy was acquitted. "We believe the children” became both the unofficial motto of advocates for the prosecution and a catch-all response to those few who asked whether the accusers had completely lost their minds. There was a book wrote about this event called "We believe the children". The prosecutors wanted everyone to just believe the children much like in Salem. Everyone wanted to throw down all the evidence against them just because the children said people did things. "He also said it was normal for children who had been abused to retract their claims and say they made it all up. The upshot: No matter what children said, they were abused, and if you didn’t believe them, something was wrong with you". Many points can be made on how similar the two events are between the one in Salem and the child abuse hysteria of 1980. This quote can be connected with the fact that if you did

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