The Relationship Between Witchcraft And The Salem Witch Trials

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Tituba is rarely at the center of attention when the Salem Witch trials are in discussion. In fact, the only time she seems to ever be mentioned is to state that she is the link between witchcraft and the adolescent girls of Salem (Breslaw. Xx). Witchcraft is defined, by Webster’s dictionary, as the “magical things that are done by witches: the use of magical powers obtained especially from evil spirits”. Although words are known to change throughout the years, witchcraft, for the most part, has remained the same, but has various interpretations, specifically in Tituba’s Arawak culture, the culture Tituba was born into and the Puritan culture in which she was forced into. Their cultures have different interpretations on who exactly might be the “evil spirits”. This paper will discuss the historical Salem of 1692 and what it meant to be a witch as well as highlight the parallels of witchcraft between Tituba’s culture and the Puritan culture and connect them to the larger picture to demonstrate the significance of witchcraft, respectively. …show more content…

The scandal began when three women, Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne and Tituba, Reverend Samuel Parris’ Amerindian slave, were accused and questioned for being witches. Tituba would be the only of the three to confess to witchcraft. Her confession led to many consequences that will be discussed later in further detail. Tituba, from the archival research Elaine Breslaw, author of Reluctant Witch of Salem, concluded that Tituba was an Amerindian slave whose cultural influences could be tracked back to the Arawak tribe (xxii). Tituba plays a significant role in the history of the Salem Witch trials because had it not been for her confession, the Puritan leaders may have not have felt such a strong presence of evil in Salem. But why did these well-educated Puritans believe in her

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