Hysteria in The Crucible

             Many occasions of mass chaos and ultimate breakdown of society directly
             result from hysteria. Hysteria means total loss of control of what seems rational and
             righteous. If a community falls into such a state, the results can be devastating. The
             Puritan society possesses the perfect conditions for such an event. In Arthur
             Miller's play, The Crucible, hysteria plays a key role as the main theme. It portrays
             as the main theme because it often becomes the atmosphere of the play and the main
             motivator of the character's actions.
             First, hysteria seems to take on as the atmosphere of the play, not to
             mention that the whole play portrays a hysterical mood. In all four acts of the play
             hysteria, in some way, comes out. In act one, hysteria prevails towards the end of
             the play when Mrs. Putnam and the others prosecute Tituba. At the beginning of
             the prosecution Tituba swears she has never seen nor been in contact with the devil.
             As they beat her and tell her if she does not confess then she will be hanged, she
             suddenly changes her mind and in a hysterical burst shouts, "And then he come one
             stormy night to me and say, Look! I have white people belong to me. And I look
             and there was Goody Good...Aye, sir, and Goody Osborne."(p.44). Then more
             hysteria takes over the scene as Abigail stands and says, " I want to open myself! I
             want the light of God; I want the sweet love of Jesus! I danced for the Devil; I saw
             him; I wrote in his book; I go back to Jesus; I kiss his hand. I saw Sarah Good with
             the Devil! I saw Goody Osborne with the Devil! I saw Bridget Bishop with the
             devil."(p.45). Then the whole scene erupts into one big hysterical mess as Betty
             awakes to shout out her sightings of the devil. The girls continue to shout out
             random names of the townspeople as the curtain falls, leaving the audience in
             ...

More Essays:

APA     MLA     Chicago
Hysteria in The Crucible. (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 16:32, April 23, 2024, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/33132.html