The Crucible was not written during the Red Scare, but later on in response to the brutality of the Red Scare.
There was no “brutality” during the so-called red scare. You’re thinking of Stalin’s show trials, of which Arthur Miller was a fan.
The Crucible directly relates to the red scare in that a small group of people were able to accuse a larger group of innocents. Arthur Miller wrote the play in direct response to the hearings that were going on in Washington D.C.
The Crucible is not an allegory, although many mistake it to be for obvious reasons. The Crucible was written, in part, because Arthur Miller (the playwright) was angered at his friend during The Red Scare. His friend, Kahn, reported a list of government names who were taking inside steps towards communism. Miller, upset at his good friends false accusations, wrote The Crucible shortly after.However, the Crucible's characters are almost historically accurate, three dimensional characters, two aspects rarely found in allegory. Crucible is often read to learn about the destructive nature of man and what reputation and greed can do to and/or for a person.
The way the trials were held, using fear and bias, were exactly like the trials of the red scare.they both have something to do with convicting, imprisoning, and killing innocent people.
it was written in response to McCarthyism during which he was accusing artists of being communist or knowing them. Miller felt these events were parallel to the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts. Arthur Miller, the author of The Crucible, was alive during the Red Scare. This was a time period in which people were accused of being or being friends with communists. If you were thought to be a communist, you were "blacklisted" This meant that the government kept a close eye on you. Arthur Miller was blacklisted. We don't know if he was a communist or not, but we do know that many people who were accused were not. He was angry that he had become blacklisted, so he wrote The Crucible. If you don't know what the Crucible is about, it is about the Salem Witch trials. During this time, people were being called witches. Basically, he wrote the play to say "Look, it has been hundreds of years, and our country has not advanced. People are still doing the same things that they did during the colonial period."
He is demonstrating an analogy between the Salem witch trials and the anti-communist ideals of McCarthyism in the 1950's otherwise known as the Red Scare.
the crucible and Salem witch trials
the red scare the red scare
he saw that the red scare was just like the Salem witch trials. during the trials people were convited for bing so called "witches" and were sentened to hang, but the proof was a comlete hoax and the people were hanged for no rewason. you should reed the crucible and compare it to the 50s red scare
The Crucible directly relates to the red scare in that a small group of people were able to accuse a larger group of innocents. Arthur Miller wrote the play in direct response to the hearings that were going on in Washington D.C.
He got lost on his way to new york and heard about the red Scare and wrote the crucible.
. It showed the dangers of witch hunts. It compared anti-Communists to witch hunters. Arthur Miller was making a statement about the Red Scare.
red scare very importnat.
no one died as a result of the "Red Scare"!
blood
The Red scare was the fear of the spread of communism during the cold war.
communism
The Crucible is not an allegory, although many mistake it to be for obvious reasons. The Crucible was written, in part, because Arthur Miller (the playwright) was angered at his friend during The Red Scare. His friend, Kahn, reported a list of government names who were taking inside steps towards communism. Miller, upset at his good friends false accusations, wrote The Crucible shortly after.However, the Crucible's characters are almost historically accurate, three dimensional characters, two aspects rarely found in allegory. Crucible is often read to learn about the destructive nature of man and what reputation and greed can do to and/or for a person.