The Crucible
McCarthyism in The Crucible In The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, the madness of the Salem witch trials is explored in great detail. There is more to the play than the witch trials, though. The Crucible was composed during a time when a similar hysteria was sweeping through America. A virtually unkown senator by the name of Joseph McCarthy was propelled into infamy when while at a speaking engagement at thee Republican Women's Club of Wheeling, West Virginia he charged 205 persons in the U.S. State Department of being members of the Communist Party (Martine 8). Fear caused the American people to succumb to the preposterous charges brought forth by McCarthy displaying resemblance's to that of the Salem community in 1692 (Carey 51). In Arthur Miller's play The Crucible, there is evidence of parallels between the Salem of 1692 and America of the 1950's, the American Government of the 1950's and its misuse of power, and the high court depicted in the play, using its power to !impose a misguided justice. The Crucible takes place in Salem, Massachusetts in the spring of 1692 in a village shrouded with chaos. The people of Salem were in uncertain times. Just a year earlier a witch in the nearby town of Beverly was executed and now
Proctor changes though; when Proctor is accused of being a witch himself he getst interested. These further investigations go on to parallel that of the judges of the Salem trials and their efforts to find anyone guilty that they possibly could. Arthur Miller himself was also put on trial by the House Committee so that he might testify on Un-American activities. Cliffs Notes on Miller's The Crucible. A few people spent time in jail and thousands were denied jobs, memberships, and other normalities because they had been accused of being communist. "Why I Wrote The Crucible: An Artist's Answer to Politics. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1993 4. The accusations by McCarthy were so powerful that President Truman himself decided to put in loyalty boards to keep communist out of America (Miller 1). Available World Wide Web: http://www.
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