Turning Points In The Crucible

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The infamous Salem witch trial of the late 1600s was a period of mass fear and hysteria. The Crucible by Arthur Miller introduces a circle of fictional characters living in Massachusetts during this moment. Though the specific events and people are mostly fictional, Miller expands a true historical account, when religion and sin were a public affair. From the first words written, we are introduced to a setting filled with tension and darkness, a notion present throughout the play. Act I begins in a room, where Betty Parris is ill. Her illness and the public belief that it was caused by witchcraft is the turning point of this act. It unfolds the story by presenting the division and complications around witchcraft. We immediately see that sense

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