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the crucible

Arthur Miller, The Crucible

Arthur Miller, The Crucible

Video from the lectures by Robert Crawford and Derek Gladwin for the Repetition Compulsion theme, March 2015.

Posted in Derek Gladwin, lecture, powerpoint, Repetition Compulsion, Rob Crawford, video | Tagged with allegory, Arthur Miller, C20th, cold war, drama, HUAC, Joseph McCarthy, miller, the crucible, tragedy, witch hunt

On sympathizing with Abigail Williams

In Arts One this week we talked about Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. In both our seminars this week there were presentations by students that led me to question my initial response to the play (okay, actually, quite often I question my initial responses to texts during seminars! But I’m going to write about one such […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

The Crucible

Whether human nature is good or bad has been discussed in a few works we have read. Hobbes argues that human being is naturally bad and the existence of sovereignty and laws is primarily to stop people hurting each other. I agreed with Hobbes’s idea when reading Leviathan, but when reading The Crucible, I feel that laws and society […] Continue reading →

Posted in blogs, lb5-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

The Crucible

When first starting The Crucible the thing I was fairly unnerved. Almost immediately I noticed the concept of the ‘private life’ of a citizen becoming entwined with the affairs of the state. Salem being a theocracy relied on the same source for moral guidelines as it did for laws: The Bible. This makes the private affairs of the citizen the […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

The Crucible–Arthur Miller

This play is really quite terrifying; I cannot think of any other way to describe it. This is the first time I’ve heard of the Salem Witch Trials, and when exposed to this book it brought to mind The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne which was also set in Puritan 17th century Massachusetts. In it, […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

My Favorite Scene in The Crucible

Personally, I found that Miller often made efforts to showcase peoples’ hypocrisy. I really enjoyed reading about how Proctor commits adultery  with Abigail and not only denies it when talking to her young lover, but also openly denies it to his wife. Nevertheless, I found it lovely and even comical when Hale arrives to his […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

The Crucible

I actually wasn’t aware that The Crucible had anything to do with the cold war, but that comparison really made me appreciate the play more. The story becomes richer when you think of it as just an earlier example of the human potential for mass hysteria, which was also present in Miller’s time. The cultural […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

Still Falling Apart

While reading the Crucible, I was reminded of the scene where Ezinma leads folks to her iyi-uwa (a stone that the ogbanje used as a link between worlds so they could “die and return again to torment [their] mother[s]” (Achebe 81)). Since my belief system does not involve ogbanje, I felt while reading that Ezinma was leading her parents and the medicine man on. Just as the people in the Crucible bowed to external pressures when confessing and convicting others, Ezinma leads them to her iyi-uwa and admits to being an ogbanje only because that is…read more

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

Names in “The Crucible”

The first time I read The Crucible in grade 12, I picked up on a quote by John Proctor near the end of the play: Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my life! Because I lie and sign myself to lies! Because I am not worth the dust on the […]

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

When the feeling’s gone and you can’t go on it’s…

Tragedy to me has always involved strong feelings of catharsis with a climactic final scene featuring  a lot of death. Therefore the Salem witch trials are perfect for this. The only problem is witches seem a lot less fun, so now my childhood is r…

Posted in blogs, lb4-2014 | Tagged with miller, the crucible

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