Good Luck Vs Crucible

1022 Words3 Pages

Imagine being falsely accused of something as a child. Now imagine being accused of the same thing, but by a court of law, who threatens to take your job, house, or even life! That same situation is present in The Crucible, a book by Arthur Miller about the Salem Witch Trials, and the movie Good Night and Good Luck directed by George Clooney, during the time of McCarthyism. Both stories tell of notorious people who create fear through their false accusations. The Crucible and Good Night and Good Luck are two stories that show that blind panic can warp morality, even in well-respected systems. When a girl named Betty suddenly falls ill in the Puritan town of Salem, rumors of witchcraft being the culprit begin to flood the town. When Reverend …show more content…

. She made me drink blood!” (Miller 43) Abigail starts to act in a dramatic manner, exaggerating her words and giving them a sense of authority. Rev. Parris, convinced by Abigail’s false accusations, begins to scrutinize Tituba instead. Tituba, visibly shaken, being pressed to confess to a crime she didn’t commit, gives in and confesses, fabricating a story to appease the Reverend. Tituba says that she saw people being seen with the devil. Abigail, hearing this, adds to the story, including more people in the false accusation. Similar to Salem’s fear of witchcraft, the film Good Night and Good Luck is set in the U.S. during the Cold War, where the fear of Communism is pervasive. Even a slight notion of “communist tendencies” (as they were called) is enough to put your career and livelihood in jeopardy. On February 9th, 1950, Senator Joseph McCarthy claimed to contain a list of 205 communists working at the U.S. Department of State. This simple accusation, paired with McCarthy’s televised hearings interrogating different Americans, instilled fear and paranoia in people working government jobs. But not everyone was so persuaded to interrogate these so-called Communists, and one of these skeptics was investigative journalist Edward R. Murrow, who’s story Good Night and Good Luck was based off

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