The Crucible Puritan Society Analysis

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Events of the play in association with the role of Puritan society
The Crucible written by Arthur Miller, is a play showcasing the struggles of the Puritan society. These struggles came about due to the strict belief followed by the Puritan society in which the whole paly is set.
There are two main struggles in the play. First is not an event that actually took place in the play, but was discussed many times especially throughout the first act and is the basis of the trials. It is Abigail, the antagonist of the play, and all the others girls need to be free and act like teenagers. Second is the result of corruption of the trials, the infamous witch trials. The fight of John Proctor is to convince the townspeople of Salem that the supposed witches …show more content…

So when Abigail is considered to be a witch in the first moments Reverend Paris is more worried and anxious about his reputation and the effect on his image rather than the situation of Abigail and her future. It is the need of Abigail to break free from the society where she is treated and kept as a slave, that makes her repulsive and rebel in such a manner. All she wants to do is act freely. This is the very reason why she goes around dancing in the forest naked, to break free, she is expressing her desire to not be held back by the restriction of the laws of the Puritan Society. She struggles to do what she wants in a society with strict rules that believed in ordering around and telling people what to do and what not to as accepted by them and not by the individuals …show more content…

The Puritan era has inspired many authors to write about. The subject of the Puritan life contains a broad list of aspects to be easily compared to several other books of different eras. Two prominent authors that go into depth of the Puritans and their life are Arthur Miller with his play ‘The Crucible’ and Nathaniel Hawthorne in his novel ‘Scarlett Letter’. Both these writers wrote about the Puritans and conveyed in their texts the similarities of religion, punishment, adultery in the Puritan age, 17th century and the course of