Tuesday, March 17, 2020
The Crucible- Struggles In The Play Essays - Salem Witch Trials
The Crucible- Struggles In The Play Essays - Salem Witch Trials    The Crucible- Struggles in the Play       The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a story that contains many   struggles. These struggles come about as a result of the strict   Puritan society in which the story takes place. There are two main   struggles in the book. The first never actually takes place in the   story, but is described many times throughout the first act and is the   basis for the trials. It is Abigail's and all the other girls' need to   be free and act like teenagers. The second is the result of the   corruption of the trials. It is John Proctor's fight to convince the   townspeople that the accused women are not witches (especially his   wife), and that it is Abigail who should be killed instead.        In Puritan society, the role of the child is to be quiet, and   stay out of the way. When Abigail is being considered a witch in the  first moments of the story, Rev. Paris is very worried about how this   will effect his image, and not of the fate of Abigail. It is this  society where Abigail feels the need to break loose and to act the way   a teenager should: freely. This is the reason why she goes dancing in   the forest. She is expressing her need to act her age and to break out   of the restrictions of Puritan law. Her struggle is to do what she   wants in a society that believes in ordering her around.       It becomes obvious soon after the trials started that many people   were going to be falsely accused by their neighbors as a method of   revenge, and as an outlet for their maliciousness. When Abigail uses   this case to attack Rebecca Nurse, one of the best Puritans in the   Salem, John Proctor begins his efforts to stop the injustice. This   increases when Elizabeth Proctor is tried and sentenced to death. This   is John Proctor's struggle. He must fight to save his wife, his   community and eventually himself. In addition, he also has to convince   the leaders of Salem that they are mistaken in believing in Abigail.       Although Abigail and Proctor are mortal enemies, their struggles   can be seen as almost identical. They both need to change the way the   higherarchy of Salem is doing things. And also, both of them would   just like to live normal lives (however, when Abigail realizes she   cannot have this, she goes crazy by accusing everybody). This is shown   when John Proctor breaks some of the harsher of the Puritan rule, and   that he dislikes all of the speeches about damnation given by Rev.   Paris. Unfortunately, the struggle of Abigail goes awry and results in   many people dying, while the valiant efforts of John Proctor are   unable to save Salem from one of the greatest tragedies in American   history.    
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