How Is Abigail Williams A Villain

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Abigail Williams in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible is both the vehicle that drives the play as well as the antagonist. She points fingers, manipulates, and ends up being the fall of Salem all in her scheme to get rid of Goody Proctor and make John Proctor her own. Abigail’s motivation to be with Proctor reveals her true self: a vindictive, manipulative young woman rebelling against a restrictive Puritan society. In many ways, the character of Abigail Williams can be considered a one-dimensional villain. All throughout the play while she’s wrecking diabolical havoc on the community, she doesn’t express any remorse for the damage she’s caused and the lives she’s inexplicitly ruined. Miller gives little background story for Abigail, but we do know that when she was younger she witnessed the brutal murder of her parents. Abigail threatens the other girls and tells them, ”Let either of …show more content…

Her background story is vague at best, but what we do know of it is violent. Personally, I feel that in some light Abigail is a sympathizing character. She’s an orphan Puritan girl that felt sexually repressed in an oppressive society. However, these aspects of her don’t necessarily excuse her actions. Abigail has a willingness to disregard Puritan social restrictions, as she dances in the woods, encourages witchcraft among the girls, and starts an affair with John Proctor. This both sets her apart from the other characters of the play but is the cause for her downfall. On the other hand, she doesn’t appear to have a conscience, as she doesn’t feel bothered by the people she has put to certain death, but merely sees them as instruments in her grand scheme to end up with John Proctor. Abigail’s fantasy of ending up with Proctor reflects her age and nativity, but at the same time she possesses a mature ruthlessness that she uses to cause fear and intimidation throughout

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