Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Possible Topics for The Crucible Essay
1. Which character in the play best exemplifies courage and integrity, and in what ways? 2. The causes of the witch-craft hysterias include many things: vengeance, jealousy, greed, power (the formerly powerless accusers suddenly gained total power), sexual repression, guilt and shame and the need to confess oneââ¬â¢s sins, the need to blame others for oneââ¬â¢s own misfortunes â⬠¦ pick a character who sees and recognizes all these true motives and argue that of all the playââ¬â¢s characters, this character demonstrates the most insight into the root causes of the hysteria and also into human nature. Consider: Proctor, Hale, Rebecca Nurse. 3. A more highly evolved thinker is someone who can, in part, transcend dichotomies (or, Dualism, a simple way of dividing the world into paired opposites, such as black-white, night-day, good-evil). Which character, of all of the characters in the play, comes closest to being able to see beyond simplistic, Dualistic thinking? Consider: Proctor, Elizabeth, Martha and Giles Corey, Reverend Hale. 4. Argue that if the vast majority of Puritans in Salem had not had a Dualistic way of viewing the worldââ¬âthat is, they all transcended dichotomous ways of thinkingââ¬âthat the witchcraft trials would never have happened. Do this by showing how central their Dualistic way of viewing the world was to the witch-hunts and trials. 5. Redemption is a common theme of a lot of religious, particularly Christian, stories and Christian-influenced cultures. Which characters in the play seek redemption, and how do they go about it? Who actually finds it? (Redemption is when someone has done something bad, and atones for, or makes up for, the bad stuff to ââ¬Ëredeemââ¬â¢ their soul, or character, to make themselvesââ¬âif not pureââ¬âat least, better than they were, to ââ¬Ëbalance the scalesââ¬â¢ again). Bear in mind that confession is a huge part of the process of redemption for many Christians, but that the Puritans did not have confessionals in their churches, as is common among Catholics. Consider: Proctor, Hale, Elizabeth. 6. Who among all the characters best fits with the definition of a ââ¬Ëperson of tomorrowââ¬â¢? Twelve characteristics of ââ¬ËThe Person of Tomorrowââ¬â¢ (according to Carl Rogers, cited in An Introduction to Theories of Personality, Fourth Edition, by B.R. Hergenhahn) 1. An openness to both inner and outer experience. 2. A rejection of hypocrisy, deceit, and double talk. In other words, a desire for authenticity. 3. A skepticism toward the kind of science and technology that has as its goal the conquest of nature or the control of people. 4. A desire for wholeness. For example, equal recognition and expression of the intellect and the emotions. 5. A wish for shared purpose in life or intimacy. 6. A tendency to embrace change and risk-taking with enthusiasm. 7. A gentle, subtle, non-moralistic, nonjudgmental caring. 8. A feeling of closeness to, and a caring for, nature. 9. Antipathy for any highly structured, inflexible, bureaucratic institution. They believe that institutions should exist for the people, not the other way around. 10. A tendency to follow the authority of their own organismic valuing process. 11. An indifference toward material comfort and rewards. 12. A desire to seek a meaning in life greater than the individualââ¬âspiritual yearning. 7. Pick a character whose choices throughout the play show how he or she morally changed, and explain how that characterââ¬â¢s social and moral choices helped him or her to grow and change. Your Essayââ¬â¢s Basic Outline: I. Introduction. 1. Write your thesis here, and include this phrase: ââ¬Å"In Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s play The Crucibleâ⬠: 2. Now write (in brief) what the three main points that support your thesis are (do not write your actual topic sentences, but just mention what those sentences will be about). Do that here: II. First Body Paragraph 1. Here, write your actual topic sentence: 2. (skip item 2 and do item 3 first and then come back to this later) Write your set-up (context) for the quotation: 3. Write the page number and the quotation you will use here: 4. Now go back and write the set-up for the quotation (item 2). Then come back to this item and write the sentence explaining why that quotation is significant, how it proves your topic sentence and thesis. Do that here: 5. Now write the sentence where you say how the quotation proved the topic sentence that supports your overall thesis. Do that here: III. Second Body Paragraph 1. Here, write your actual topic sentence: 2. (skip item 2 and do item 3 first and then come back to this later) Write your set-up (context) for the quotation: 3. Write the page number and the quotation you will use here: 4. Now go back and write the set-up for the quotation (item 2). Then come back to this item and write the sentence explaining why that quotation is significant, how it proves your topic sentence and thesis. Do that here: 5. Now write the sentence where you say how the quotation proved the topic sentence that supports your overall thesis. Do that here: IV. Third Body Paragraph 1. Here, write your actual topic sentence: 2. (skip item 2 and do item 3 first and then come back to this later) Write your set-up (context) for the quotation: 3. Write the page number and the quotation you will use here: 4. Now go back and write the set-up for the quotation (item 2). Then come back to this item and write the sentence explaining why that quotation is significant, how it proves your topic sentence and thesis. Do that here: 5. Now write the sentence where you say how the quotation proved the topic sentence that supports your overall thesis. Do that here: V. Conclusion 1. Now re-write your thesis statement from your introduction here that communicates the same idea but using different words. 2. Re-list the three examples you gave in your introduction, in the order in which you addressed them in your body paragraphs (list the example from your first body paragraph first, then the example from your second body paragraph second, and the example from your third body paragraph last). Exemplar Outline for The Crucible I. Introduction. Thesis: ââ¬Å"In Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s play The Crucible, social inequalities led to struggles for power in the time of the Salem witch-hunts, with tragic (fatal) results.â⬠Examples: social class, gender and age (Abby and the girls), race (Tituba), social class (Goody Osburn). II. Body Paragraph. Topic Sentence: ââ¬Å"In Salem of the 1690ââ¬â¢s, all childrenââ¬âespecially girlsââ¬âwere essentially powerless, even more so if they were poor; these inequalities led directly to Abigail and the other girlsââ¬â¢ ruthlessly exploiting the only opportunity they had to gain power in their society: through accusations of witchcraft.â⬠Alternative: ââ¬Å"Those who had been denied power in Salemââ¬âpoor servant girlsââ¬âgot a taste of it by accusing others of witchcraft, and, power-drunk, became addicted to it: their society gave them no power at all, at first, then gave them absolute power which corrupted them absolutely.â⬠Examples: From Millerââ¬â¢s description of Parris, ââ¬Å"Until this strange crisis he, like the rest of Salem, never conceived that the children were anything but thankful for being permitted to walk straight, eyes slightly lowered, arms at the sides, and mouths shut until bidden to speakâ⬠(3). The way Proctor treats Mary Warren; Proctor says to Mary Warren, ââ¬Å"Be you foolish, Mary Warren? Be you deaf? I forbid you leave the house, did I not?â⬠Mary Warren says, ââ¬Å"I only come to see the great doings in the world.â⬠Proctor says, ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢ll show you a great doinââ¬â¢ on your arse one of these days. Now get you home; my wife is waitinââ¬â¢ with your work!â⬠(20). When Proctor goes to whip her, Mary Warren says, ââ¬Å"I saved her [Elizabethââ¬â¢s] life today!â⬠(56). Her newfound power is shown when she says, ââ¬Å"I am bound by law, I cannot tell it. I only hope youââ¬â¢ll not be so sarcastical no more. Four judges and the Kingââ¬â¢s deputy sat to dinner with us but an hour ago. Iââ¬âI would have you speak civilly to meâ⬠(57)â⬠¦. and when she says ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢ll not be ordered to bed no more, Mr. Proctor! I am eighteen and a woman, however single!â⬠(57). The new-found power of the accusers, now at the center of attention: Proctor says, ââ¬Å"Is the accuser always holy now? Were they born this morning as clean as Godââ¬â¢s fingers? â⬠¦ We are what we always were in Salem, but now the little crazy children are jangling the keys of the kingdom, and common vengeance writes the law!â⬠(73). Danforth says, ââ¬Å"Do you know, Mr. Proctor, that the entire contention of the state in these trials is that the voice of Heaven is speaking through the children?â⬠(82). Elizabeth says, ââ¬Å"Abigail brings the other girls into the court, and where she walks the crowd will part like the sea for Israel. And folks are brought before them, and if they scr eam and howl and fall to the floorââ¬âthe personââ¬â¢s clapped in the jail for bewitchinââ¬â¢ themâ⬠(50). III. Body Paragraph Topic Sentence w/ Elaboration: ââ¬Å"Racism also played a role in forcing Tituba, an accused witch, to participate in the hysteria. As a black woman slave, she had to do what her master Reverend Parris commanded, and so in the guise of ââ¬Ëconfessingââ¬â¢ what he and other whites so clearly wanted to hear, she was also able to express her hatred of her oppressor by attributing it to the Devil, and also exercise some power over white people, things she otherwise could never have safely done.â⬠Examples: ââ¬Å"Tituba â⬠¦ is also very frightened because her slave sense has warned her that, as always, trouble in this house eventually lands on her backâ⬠(8). Abigail says, ââ¬Å"She made me do it! She made Betty do it!â⬠(40). Abigail says, ââ¬Å"She makes me drink blood!â⬠(41). Tituba says, ââ¬Å"You beg me to conjure! She beg me make charmââ¬ââ⬠(41). Parris says, ââ¬Å"You will confess yourself or I will take you out and whip you to your death, Tituba!â⬠(42). Putnam says, ââ¬Å"This woman must be hanged! She must be taken and hanged!â⬠(42). Putnam says, ââ¬Å"Sarah Good? Did you ever see Sarah Good with him [the Devil]? Or Osburn?â⬠(43). Hale says, ââ¬Å"You have confessed yourself to witchcraft, and that speaks a wish to come to Heavenââ¬â¢s side. And we will bless you, Titubaâ⬠(43). Hale says, ââ¬Å"You are Godââ¬â¢s instrument put in our hands to discover the Devilââ¬â¢s agents among us. You are selected, Tituba, you are chosen to help us cleanse our villageâ⬠(44). TITUBA. Oh, how many times he bid me kill you, Mr. Parris! â⬠¦ He say Mr. Parris must be kill! Mr. Parris no goodly man, Mr. Parris mean man and no gentle man, and he bid me rise out of my bed and cut your throat! â⬠¦ And then he come one stormy night to me, and he say, ââ¬ËLook! I have white people belong to me.ââ¬â¢ And I lookââ¬âand there was Goody Good â⬠¦ Aye, sir, and Goody Osburn. (44) IV. Body Paragraph Topic Sentence w/ Elaboration: ââ¬Å"Lastly, inequalities in social class played a huge role in the hysterias. Those who were middle class might be accused by those jealous of their rise in social stature, or because a wealthier person (like Putnam) could afford to buy the forfeited property of the ââ¬Ëwitchââ¬â¢ once s/he had hanged, but the easiest targets for false accusations of witchcraft were those who were very poor, like Goody Osburn. Salemââ¬â¢s poor became victims of false accusations because these victims, as social outcasts and undesirables (or, nuisances) would not be missed.â⬠Examples: Mary Warren says, ââ¬Å"Goody Osburnââ¬âwill hang! â⬠¦ When she come into the court I say to myself, I must not accuse this woman, for she sleep in ditches, and so very old and poor. But thenââ¬ââ⬠[and describes how Goody Osburn sent her spirit out on her] (54). Mary Warren says, ââ¬Å"So many time, Mr. Proctor, she come to this very door, begginââ¬â¢ bread and a cup of ciderââ¬âand mark this: whenever I turned her away empty, she mumbledâ⬠(55). V. Conclusion Restatement of thesis: ââ¬Å"Inequalities in Salem in terms of age, gender, race, and social class made the witch-hunts possible. Those who had been denied any power in their society were suddenly able to become all-powerful through accusing others of witchcraft: often, they targeted those even less powerful than themselves.â⬠Examples: Abby and the girls accuse Tituba, Tituba accuses a white woman of low social class (Goody Osburn), who Mary Warren (a servant girl) also accuses.
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