Denotation In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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“The Crucible”, Salem, witchcraft, court trials, what do all of these signify? What is the most universally, general, expansive, and meaningful reasoning behind the writing of this play, and what meaning does it hold now in modern day America? In an article published by The New Yorker, “Why I wrote ‘The Crucible’”, Arthur Miller gives context in the characters, like John Proctor, Elizabeth Proctor, and Abigail Williams, Miller also provides the allegory he expresses very cautiously. Arthur Miller rants on about how he actually related to John Proctor, “who, in spite of an imperfect character, was able to fight the madness around him” (Why I wrote “The Crucible” The New Yorker, October 21, 1996 P. 158). Arthur Miller also shares some denotation …show more content…

In the play, as described, Salem was a bleak, heavily Puritan influenced town, built upon the ideas of Theocracy. Their society prohibit “anything resembling a theater or ‘vain enjoyment’” (Miller 4) much like some societies today who prohibit some forms of western ‘vain enjoyment’, like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Furthermore, Salem, being an early grasp on sociality, also had a huge split between its men and women. Salem, displayed in “The Crucible”, have some brief examples of misogyny and disrespect towards women, with the social status and relevance of women being virtually nothing compared to men. This struggle, however, is vastly diminished once Abigail and the other girls gain power with their influences of alleged witchcraft tendencies. The female suffering and absence of female suffrage can also be compared to the likes of societies in the United Arab …show more content…

The characters who are the villains who support the idea of exploiting the Salem people and their fears, are the girls, led by Abigail Williams. Once irrelevant in the society of Salem, now are more popular than ever, and the girls simply can’t let anything take away the attention from them, even if means using the lives of some people and abusing them mentally. Divided amongst right and wrong, John Proctor, the avid endeavor of the dissolvement of the hysterical corruption in Salem, fights against Abigail and her wrongful influence. Referencing back to Arthur Miller’s binary opposition on McCarthyism and the Salem witch trials, he himself felt at fault for trying to expose the wrongfulness in conviction of alleged Communists (Salem’s witches). Miller felt fearful for his own identity as an American citizen, as protesting too strongly against McCarthyism would prove him to be a hidden

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