The Influences Of Writing In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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During Arthur Miller’s life span from 1915-2005, he wrote works such as “The Crucible”, “A View From the Bridge”, ” Incident at Vichy”, “The Price”, “The American Clock”, “The Creation of the World and Other Business” , and “Broken Glass”. Though his writing in “The Crucible” was based on a time before his life. So why Miller wrote the piece has to do with the factors of what was going on around him in America and his personal life relationships that were influences of and in his writing of the piece in 1953. Miller’s playwrights were transcendent to others writing, reflective of the time, giving people a frank view of the events happening, and changed American theater.
Arthur Miller was born in 1915 and wrote the play “The Crucible” based on a time period before he was born. The salem witch trials (the occurrence as the play develops) happened during the Puritan time period in 1692-93. His writing in “The Crucible” was based on a true story only exaggerating Abigail William’s (a protagonist/antagonist mix because of her manipulative motives) age to seventeen …show more content…

Profoundly influenced by the Depression and the war that immediately followed it” (American Masters, Arthur Miller Biography, Par. 1). This gave him inspiration in his writing that, “tapped into a sense of dissatisfaction and unrest within the greater American psyche.”(American Masters, Arthur Miller Biography, Par. 1), which is what made his pieces unique. Miller having post-war stress and trauma also led to the writing of “The Crucible”. He focuses on the tragedy in the characters lives while expanding “his voice and his concern for the physical and psychological well being of the working class.” (American Masters, Arthur Miller Biography, Par. 5). Miller also uses “The Crucible” as a way to ignominy the act of McCarthyism that was happening than in the 1950s as well as during the salem witch trials in the