Fear And Hysteria In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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How could Proctor in the “Crucible” have done more to end the hysteria in Salem? In Arthur Miller “The Crucible,” the depiction of the Salem witch trials offers a compelling parallel to the hysteria and paranoia fueled by the Communist Red Scare of the 1950s. During the Red Scare, fear was always a natural emotion that protects people from harm when they face real and imminent danger. A phobia is an excessive fear or anxiety related to specific objects or situations that are out of proportion to the actual danger they present, in easy terms, it is an uncontrollable version of fear. Both historical contexts reveal when fear worsens it can become hysteria and hysteria can become worse and once it becomes worse, it will lead to panic, uncontrollable fear, and people will start to act irrationally. …show more content…

As stated in “The Crucible” Act 3, “I have lusted but for her, she is a whore, for she wishes to dance with me on my wife’s grave.” John Proctor says. He is clearly confessing he has committed adultery and he regrets it and he knows for a fact that if he hadn't had an affair with Abigail Williams then his wife wouldn’t be on trial for witchcraft and no one would’ve executed him. Abigail knows for a fact that none of it would’ve

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