The Crucible/Salem Witch Trials Vs. The Mccarthy Hearings Essay, Research Paper
In the play, The Crucible, many parallels can be found in reference to the 1950 Communist trials led by Joe McCarthy. In this work by Arthur Miller, the events of the 1692 Salem witch trials parallel those of the McCarthy trials, in that, both events were not only based on insubstantial evidence but caused mass hysteria that destroyed the lives and reputations of those involved.
In the Salem witch trials, insubstantial evidence was present in each of the events. People trying to save themselves from being prosecuted created the evidence from the witch trials. The parallel of the McCarthy trials was that people would falsely accuse other people of being a member of the Communist party. One of the lines of the play quotes John Proctor, ?? as I have quailed, and as you that this be fraud ? God damns our kind especially, and we will burn, we will burn together?. (Miller, 1240)
The mass hysteria of the witch trials was contrived by pointing blame at each other. From, The Crucible, the girls, led by Abigail Williams, turned the town hysterical, and blamed other people
The Crucible, showed that insubstantial evidence, and insignificant people being blamed not only causes lives, jobs, reputations, and families to be ruined, but also mass hysteria takes over the town, or even the country, and upsets people to no extent.
Bibliography
Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 98.
CD-ROM. 2 discs. Joseph Raymond McCarthy.
Ellen Schrecker. The Age of McCarthyism: A Brief History with Documents.
Boston: St. Martin?s Press, 1994
The American Expedition: Arthur, Miller The Crucible.
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1991