1. John Proctor is a tall man. He has long brown hair and a short beard and mustache. He has a bold personality and cares about his family. He stands up for what he believes in no matter what the cost.
How john Proctor was a dynamic character in The Crucible and changed throughout the play because He confessed to adultry to try to save his wife. He wanted to prove that his wife never lies because the court thought she was lying about not being a witch. He wanted to prove that Abigail and the other girls were just lying to get attention. He wanted Elizabeths forgiveness so he tried to get it to confessing to people and explaining that he knew it was wrong. Therefore, How john Proctor was a dynamic character in The Crucible and changed throughout the play because He confessed to adultry to try to save his wife.
In the story John was described as, “a farmer in his middle thirties… He was the kind of man-powerful of body, even-tempered and not easily led” (Miller 148). In the story, Proctor serves as one of the main protagonists, a thirty-something year-old man who saw the corruption in the witch trial system before many of the other characters in The Crucible. However, the historical John Proctor was a man in his sixties. This change was made in order to shape the character of John Proctor into the protagonist that he is in The Crucible.
Conformity is is good or bad Conformity is something that can lead to a bad society. Conformity is good but most of the time it its bad because people think that a group of people is always smarter than one person. Conformity does not mean that all people who are a group are right. Unfortunaly conformity is not always right just like in the book The Crucible.
Society today is really judgemental. If you don’t wear the right clothes or have the right car then you will get judged. It’s kinda like in the book The Crucible if you weren't a puritan then you were an outcast or you might have been a witch. One of the puritan girls Abigail Williams blamed a lot of women who were called puritans and lived the puritan way. In this case people just judged them without looking into far more research.
And the tension heats up from there. During The Crucible John Proctor shows many different rhetorics. He is shown to be the everyman person who makes mistakes but, also wants to do the right thing and be the best person he can be if at all possible. As the play prolongs through each act Proctor begins to evolve.
Janae Wimbley Mrs. Agee English 102 13 February 2023 People Can Be Easily Fooled In 1692 the Salem witch trials took place in eastern Massachusetts where multiple innocent women and men were arrested and hung on accounts of pursuing witchcraft. Miller based The Crucible off the events of the Salem witch trials and the McCarthy Investigations of the 1950s. He wanted to write a play considering the cultural and political events that were happening in the U.S. around the time of the government seeking to conceal communism. In The Crucible, Arthur Miller uses dynamic and static characters to display how people value their reputation, obtain justice, experience judgement, and are intolerant to one’s views or beliefs.
According to Aristotle, “A man doesn’t become a hero until he can see the root of his own downfall.” Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible, written about the Salem Witch trials, presents itself as an allegory for McCarthyism. In this work, protagonist John Proctor is the tragic hero of the play. John most clearly fits the mold of a tragic hero in the play based on his effort to save his wife, his change of character, and his pride that not only lead him to his death, but to a sacrifice for Salem. To begin, John went to extensive lengths to try and help save his wife, Elizabeth Proctor, who was accused of witchcraft and ultimately imprisoned.
In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, he does whatever he can throughout the play to keep his name pure, but he already tarnished it before the play even started by sleeping with Abigail. From then on, he is stuck in a hole he couldn’t get out of. John Proctor is a man who is cowardly, misleading, and conniving to his friends. John Proctor shows his cowardly side throughout the play. He especially shows it when he sneaks around Salem to find Abigail .
To begin, Arthur Miller portrays John Proctor as an honorable man because he is loyal to his friends and family. Proctor goes to the city of Salem because he heard about witches that were found in the city, while he is there he
At the beginning of the play, John Proctor is depicted both as a proud man who kept his affair a secret from the public to protect his name, and an honorable man who built the Salem church. Before Elizabeth Proctor was accused, John Proctor tried to distance
The Crucible: Self Preservation is Motivation By definition self preservation is the “..set of behaviors by means of which individuals attempt to preserve their own existence and the psychical processes that establish these behaviors..”. For The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, self preservation has been shown to have affected multiple characters, including John Proctor, Samuel Parris, and Abigail. In The Crucible, self preservation is also the greatest motivation . John Proctor is one of the characters being affected by this trend of self preservation being motivation for the characters of The Crucible.
John Proctor, the leading character of The Crucible, is one of the characters who strive to maintain his power in
What the Audience learns from John Proctor throughout the Crucible is that John Proctor was a flawed character and the beginning of the play, but coming into conclusion of the play he regains himself because he chooses to act as a tragic hero by seeking justice for his wife, friends, and
He now begins to stand up not only for himself, but for those around him, and does what he knows is right. Originally Proctor would not stand up to the powerful figures such as Abigail and the court. Yet in the final acts of the play Proctor promises to Elizabeth that he will,“fall like an ocean on that court”. Now he will stop at nothing to do the right thing at the end, while in the beginning he avoided doing what was right at all costs. In the concluding two acts of the play John Proctor’s new found strength does not waver even under the constant pressure of the court as it once would