Who Is Mccarthyism In The Crucible

474 Words1 Page

The plot of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, which focuses on the Salem witch trials of the late 1600s, is an analogy and criticism to the McCarthy investigations that were going on during the 1950s, which is also called the McCarthyism, so it is important to study the McCarthyism as the background of The Crucible in order to comprehend the work better.
After World War II, the cold war between Soviet Union and America became increasingly intense, causing a fear of international communism. Joseph R. McCarthy, a senator from Wisconsin, capitalized this kind of fear by charging the U.S. State Department was riddled with Communist agents. McCarthy’s targets expanded to all the people who were “soft on communism”. The House Un-American Activities Committee, …show more content…

In The Crucible, Deputy Governor Danforth is the McCarthy figure. Elizabeth Proctor is accused of practicing witchcraft by Abigail Williams and arrested without clear evidence to prove her guilty. When John, in his wife’s defense, brings in a petition signed by 91 citizens, Danforth orders the arrest of everyone who signed, which resembles to the speech that McCarthy gave in Wheeling, West Virginia, in 1950, where “he asserted a sheet of paper contained the names of 205 Communists working and shaping policy in the ‘State Department’”(Quinn 1). During the McCarthyism, a large number of artists, actors and writers, including Miller, were subpoenaed to prove that they had not been active in the Communist Party. If they confessed they were expected to name the names of anyone else involved or they would be sent to jail for contempt of Congress, which is exactly the same as the trail process in The Crucible - when John Proctor confesses, he is asked if he sees Rebecca Nurse with the Devil. In addition, John Proctor’s refusal to name any other names for Danforth, is much the same as what Miller did.

Open Document