Why Is Hale Marginalized In The Crucible

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As everyone knows, marginalization is strongly shown in the Crucible, and there are several characters who had marginalized by someone else. Because of their personalities, race, and fate. Those are the main reason shows why they were being marginalized. I choose three characters from the Crucible, Reverend John Hale, Tituba, and Giles Corey. First of all, Reverend John Hale was one of the marginal characters because others thought that he was naive and rash. Also, he started to question and wonder everything in the court which made others hate him. For example, when Hale came to Salem and prayed with Parris, Danforth and Herrick were making a conversation: DANFORTH, suspiciously: What is he about here? DANFORTH: Indeed. That man has no authority They marginalized Hale by his personality which is annoying. When Danforth asked both Proctor and Elizabeth the truth about why she dismissed Abigail, Elizabeth decided to protect Proctor, so she covered they had an affair already. After, Hale tried to say the reason which is Elizabeth wanted to protect his husband, so she said a lie, but Danforth did not listen to anything from Hale, he still believe that Abigail was innocent. Also, he was naive and easily controlled by others, he said: “I am a stranger here, as you know, and in my ignorance. I find it hard to draw a clear option of them that come accused before the court” (Miller 64-65). It means he could not make a clear option and his mind was always vacillating. Both Proctor and Danforth marginalized him because Proctor did not believe there was witchcraft in Salem but Hale thought there was. Because of Hale, it led lots of innocent people died and it hurt Elizabeth. Moreover, Danforth was different from Hale’s mind. For example, Hale told him that Abigail was lying, but he did not believe that. Secondly, Tituba was marginalized by Abigail because her race, and Reverend Parris and Ann Putnam said she harm their children. For instance, when Hale asked Abigail about what Tituba told when they were in the forest, she said: “ I know not- she spoke Barbados” (Miller 43). Abigail accused Tituba of the witchcraft, she against Tituba because she was black and she spoke the different language which made her accuse Tituba had a relationship with witchcraft easily. In this case, Tituba became individual and outsider. Also at the beginning of the book, Arthur Miller gave Tituba’s a character introduction. He said: “The opens, and his Negro slave enters” (Miller 8). In the drama, there was no direct opinion that shows other people reject Tituba, but from this quotation, people can know that Tituba in this village had become an outsider because

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