The Crucible by Arthur Miller MAJOR THEMES. Hysteria Definition: noun 1. an uncontrollable outburst of emotion or fear, often characterized by irrationality,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
**Crucible = severe test**. Puritans Never formally left the Church of England (wanted to return and purify the church). They believed God ruled first,
Advertisements

CONFLICT IN THE CRUCIBLE.
Responding to Text Dependent Questions
The Crucible Who’s Who.
Analyzing The Crucible
The Crucible by Arthur Miller
The Crucible Act I.
The Crucible Acts I & II *Choose a question from the board on the next slide. Click once to reveal the answer, then click the star to return to the board.
Crucible Reverse Jeopardy Characters Literary Terms Plot Events SettingQuoteSignificance
The Crucible Plot Line. EXPOSTION Salem, Spring, 1692 Background: Religion, Theocracy, importance of reputation, land disputes *Abigail is confronted.
$100$200$100$300$100$200 $400 $200$200$400 $100 $400 $100$400 $500 $200$500 $300$500$300$300$500$300$400 $500.
The Crucible by: Arthur Miller. Characterization Reverend Parris – “I have many enemies.” “There is a faction that is sworn to drive me from my pulpit.”
The Crucible Arthur Miller. Arthur Miller: A Life Born on October 17, 1915 Attended the University of Michigan from Graduated with a degree.
The Crucible Act IV.
The Crucible Act III.
Nov 21 – Jr American Lit You will need: The Crucible - Act I Agenda:
The Crucible Themes.
The Crucible Revision. Context 1692 Salem, Massachusetts Strange sickness and hallucinations of some girls lead to accusations within the village Nineteen.
Focus Questions The Crucible: Act I.
Belonging in The Crucible. Belonging in the play Community Belonging vs Individual Beliefs Hysteria Reputation & Belonging Belief & Control Persecuting.
The Crucible Act I.
The Crucible Bellringer #17 9/5/13 1. What does Giles accuse Mr. Putnam of in the beginning of Act III? 2. When Danforth gives John Proctor the offer to.
Historical Background for Arthur Miller’s The Crucible Salem Witch Trials The.
The Crucible Arthur Miller. Arthur Miller was an American playwright who was born in His Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer prize in Miller.
The Crucible Act III Quiz Review.
Crucible Notes. Miller used actual events to create his works. The Crucible was designed to address artistic/political purposes. First produced on Broadway.
CRUCIBLE STUDY GUIDE. 1/ How does the story open? 2/ Why is Reverend Parris worried only about himself and not his daughter? 3/ Why is Tituba worried.
Parris slave daughter niece Tituba Betty Abigail John Proctor Had an affair Thomas and Ann Putnam daughter Ruth Conjured spirits in the forest Dislike.
Characters MotifsMotivesVocabEvents.
Arthur Miller John Proctor  Local farmer, stern, harsh- tongued. Hates hypocrisy. Husband of Elizabeth.
‘The Crucible Themes. Introduction to Themes This play was written in the context of the anti-communist political witch hunts of the 1950s, and its central.
The Crucible Act I. Reverend Parris’ House Spring His daughter, Betty, is lying on the bed and is not moving.
The Crucible Act III.
$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200.
THIS IS Characters True/ False Short Answer Who Said?! Name that Act! Misc.
The Crucible Themes.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller. Preview/Foundation Setting: 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts Point of View: third-person omniscient and first-person Historical.
The Crucible CHARACTERS The Crucible American Literature.
Crucible Jeopardy Characters Literary Terms Plot Events Setting McCarthy Trials/Kazan and Miller
The Crucible Arthur Miller. Minister of Salem church; paranoid, power-hungry and self-pitying; many people dislike him. Reverend Parris.
Act 1 Quiz Review.  A container made of a substance that can resist great heat for melting; The hollow at the bottom of an ore furnace, where the molten.
1. How much time has passed since Act I? 8 Days.
Students will understand what causes the flaws in the justice system in Act III.
ACT BY ACT Summaries. SUMMARY- ACT 1 Setting: home of Rev Parris. Parris is praying over Betty who is in a coma. Abigail enters. Susanna says the Doc.
CharactersCourtAccusationsQuotesMisc
Paper Topics Writing a letter From one character to another
Sample #1: Proctor: That woman will never lie, Mr. Danforth.” Proctor’s statement, “That woman will never lie…” suggest his rigid belief in the idea that.
The Crucible Exam Review Robinson English III. Crucible Jeopardy Puritan Background/ McCarthyism Literary Elements Plot Structure Characterization What.
The Crucible List of Characters. Francis Nurse Head of the Nurse family; Respected man in town. Tried to stop the trials by aiding John Proctor.
The Crucible Acts I & II Review Women of Salem Say what? Act I Act IIMen of Salem
GOOD VS EVIL STUDENTS WILL UNDERSTAND HOW TO EXPLAIN THE NATURE OF GOOD AND EVIL IN ‘THE CRUCIBLE’
CHARACTER INTRODUCTIONS The Crucible By Arthur Miller.
Themes and Motifs The Crucible.
Act III Comprehension Questions
The Crucible by Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible Introduction Notes.
The Crucible Act 3 & 4.
THE CRUCIBLE NOTES FOR UNIT TEST.
Tuesday, September 8th and Wednesday, September 9th American Lit
TOD and discussion questions
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
Crucible Reverse Jeopardy
The Crucible Characters.
Salem, Massachusetts, 1692 A time of vengeance and power.
The Crucible Plot Line.
Act III – The Crucible Much of Act III: to do with determining who will define innocence and guilt. Major themes in Act III: Hysteria Reputation Danger.
The Crucible By Arthur Miller
The Crucible By Arthur Miller.
The Crucible Jeopardy American Literature.
Presentation transcript:

The Crucible by Arthur Miller MAJOR THEMES

Hysteria Definition: noun 1. an uncontrollable outburst of emotion or fear, often characterized by irrationality, laughter, weeping, etc. Synonyms: commotion, confusion Examples: – Neighbors suddenly turn on each other and accuse people they have known for YEARS – Community-wide fear overwhelms logic and individual thought and becomes the justifying means – Becomes the means of expressing suppressed anger and resentment (towards others but also towards the strict society of Puritanism) – They BELIEVE the devil is attacking Salem

Hysteria Cont. -If Devil is attacking Salem, it becomes a DUTY or righteous act that protects the God you love, to seek out those who support evil/witchcraft

Ideology Definition: noun 1. the body of doctrine, myth, belief, etc., that guides an individual, social movement, institution, class, or large group. -Ideology can be DANGERGOUS!! – these ideas DEFINE what Salem thinks!! -Puritans thought that the Devil would do anything to destroy them -religion ran the government; government actions were seen as “good” -anyone who even ATTEMPTED to question or obstruct government actions was seen as trying to overthrow God

Ideology Cont. Governments that followed rigid ideologies = corruption and tyranny Ex) Gov. Danforth and Judge Hathorne – Never believe they are wrong- never assess their believes – Easy targets for liars, like Abby – Court is narrow-minded; easily taken advantage b/c they only have ONE view

Reputation & Integrity Reputation: – noun 1. the estimation in which a person or thing is held, especially by the community or the public generally; repute: a man of good reputation.whichcommunityrepute – The way people receive you

Reputation & Integrity Cont. Integrity – noun 1. adherence to moral and ethical principles; soundness of moral character; honesty. – Virtue *In Crucible- reputation or integrity? -Parris, Abby, others, choose reputation -Rebecca, Proctor choose integrity

Bad Reputation= social or even physical punishment Those who protect reputation are DANGEROUS- they allow harm to others and fuel hysteria Those who favor integrity by admitting mistakes and refusing to lie- DEFY hysteria-stop the fear that feeds hysteria

Act 1- Hysteria Parris’ house because of Betty’s actions-hysteria begins Rumors of witchcraft become BELIEF in witchcraft- works upon irrational fear Betty and Ruth’s actions Both Putnams WANT witchcraft to exist Betty’s crying out when psalms are sung Witchcraft brings on resentments in Salem- impact characters’ actions as hysteria grows Hysteria is powerful- those who are ‘voices of reason’ cannot stop it Tituba’s accusations of Goody Osburn fuels Mrs. Putnam’s hysteria (Osburn was midwife) Vicious cycle of hysteria continues as Abigail and Betty shout out accusations

Act 1- Ideology Bringing Hale into the mix- calling him is dangerous- once religion is involved things escalate Hale is a minister, yet views his beliefs in witchcraft as almost ‘doctor-like’ – these facts help make him unbias When Tituba denies witchcraft, religious officials see it as LIES- they encourage her to admit to false witchcraft Hale believes the girls immediately

Act 1- Reputation & Ideology Parris and Abby want to protect reputations. P- wants no one to know what is going on with Betty A- warning girls NOT to mention what happened in forest Abigail lies to Parris about woods- making herself look good and innocent Abigail lies to Parris about losing Proctor’s Putnams have strong influence on Parris because of their reputation Betty and Ruth act sick to save their reputations Abigail lies about Tituba and Ruth conjuring spirits All the girls try to save face- Abby forces them to lie Proctor is HONEST- knows he is immoral and is self-loathing Accusations against neighbors to try and make self look ‘good’ Putnam and Nurse hatred comes out because of witchcraft accusations

R & I Cont. Abby denied witchcraft until Hale mentions there is- she switches stories Tituba tries to save first- denies witchcraft Tituba admits to save herself and reputation Betty and Abigail accuse several girls- continue to save themselves

Act 2- Hysteria Hysteria grips town- even authorities- even Proctor has to admit hysteria is present Hysteria encourages confessions of NON-EXISTENT witchcraft Hysteria changes peoples’ perceptions of reality- Mary Warren now believes witchcraft exists Mary gains power from the hysteria surrounding Salem Hysteria provides forum expressing suppressed grievances Mary’s end of Act may be stronger than her integrity- possible disaster ahead

Act 2- Ideology Hale has integrity- NOT comfortable with the court situation-wants EVIDENCE, not accusations Puritans -God is on their side, cannot make mistakes Ministers =good and wise Disagree with church- go against God Proctor goes against Hale- Hale ignores his plea; inability to question themselves (religious officials) Hale believes court is blessed by God- court will find truth Court has no need for evidence- God runs it, judgments will be just and correct! Hale thinks courts arrival in Salem is God’s will

Act 2- Reputation & Integrity Proctor and Elizabeth’s marital situation Proctor resists going to court to protect reputation Proctor’s anger over affair- concern for rep. and int. Hale- integrity in searching for evidence Puritans attack each other- against God: evil, agree God: righteous Proctor takes stand against oppressive society- rips up warrant Proctor STOPS protecting rep.- is going to court