Title: The Crucible by Arthur Miller
1The Crucibleby Arthur Miller
- Historical Cultural Context Information
- Advanced Composition Novel
- Mrs. Snipes
2Arthur Miller (1915-2005)
- Known and respected for his intimate and
realistic portrayal of the working class, Arthur
Miller remains one of the most prolific
playwrights of his time. At the peak of his
career immediately following World War II,
American theater was transformed by his profound
ability to capture the heart of the common man
and make his audiences empathize with his plight
as he attempts to find his war in an often harsh
and unsympathetic world.
3Arthur Miller (cont.)
- Arthur Miller was born in 1915 in New York, into
a middle-class Jewish immigrant family. His
father was a clothing manufacturer and store
owner who experienced significant loss after the
Stock Market Crash of 1929. Miller attended
Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, and was
a gifted athlete and an average student. After
being rejected the first time, Miller was finally
accepted into the University of Michigan in 1934,
where his studies focused on drama and
journalism. He graduated in 1938 with a
Bachelors degree in English. Two years later, he
published his first play, the relatively
unsuccessful The Man Who Had All the Luck and
married his college girlfriend Mary Slattery,
with whom he later had two children, Robert and
Jane.
4Arthur Miller (cont.)
- Millers first prominent play was All My
Sons(1947), a tragedy about a factory owner who
knowingly sold faulty aircraft parts during World
War II. All My Sons won the Drama Critics Circle
Award and two Tony Awards. His 1949 play Death of
a Salesman was also an enormous critical success,
winning the Drama Critics Circle Award, the
Pulitzer Prize, and several Tony Awards,
including Best Play, Best Author, and Best
Director. To this day, Death of a Salesman
remains one of his most famous and respected
works.
5Arthur Miller (cont.)
- In 1950, Millers troubles began. After directing
a production of Henrik Ibsens An Enemy of the
People, Miller began getting negative attention
for his very public political and social
commentary. In 1953 The Crucible opened on
Broadway, depicting a deliberate parallel between
the Salem Witch Trials and the Communist Red
Scare that America was experiencing at the time.
This production brought more suspicion onto
Miller at a very unstable time in American
history, and in June of 1956, he was called to
testify in front of the House Committee on
Un-American Activities (HUAC), for which he was
found in contempt of court for his refusal to
cooperate and identify names of Communist
sympathizers. This ruling was later overturned by
the United States Court of Appeals, but damage to
his reputation had taken place nonetheless.
6Arthur Miller (cont.)
- That same year, he divorced his wife and married
actress and American icon Marilyn Monroe
however, his marriage to Monroe did not last
longthey divorced in 1961. His plays After the
Fall (1964) and Finishing the Picture (2004) are
said to loosely depict their turbulent and
unhappy marriage. After divorcing Monroe, Miller
married Inge Morath, with whom he had a son,
Daniel, in 1962, and a daughter, Rebecca, in
1963. There have been unconfirmed reports that
Millers son Daniel was diagnosed with Down
Syndrome shortly after he was born and that
Miller institutionalized Daniel and never saw or
spoke to him again, even in his poignant
autobiography Timebends (1987).
7Arthur Miller (cont.)
- Millers other plays include Incident at Vichy
(1965), The Price (1968), The Creation of the
World and Other Business (1972), The American
Clock (1980), The Ride Down Mount Morgan (1991),
Broken Glass (1994), and Resurrection Blues
(2002). He also wrote a novel, Focus (1945), a
book of short stories in 1967, several
screenplays and television movies, and Echoes
Down the Corridor (2000), a collection of essays.
In addition, he collaborated with Inge (who was a
photographer) on several books. He received the
Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1999 and
the National Book Foundations medal for his
contribution to American literature in 2001. - Arthur Miller died of heart failure in February
of 2005 at his Connecticut home. He was 89 years
old.
8Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials
- In 1950, Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible as a
parallel between the Salem Witch Trials and the
current events that were spreading throughout the
United States at the time. A similar witch hunt
was happening in the United Statesand this time,
the accused were those who were a part of the
Communist Party or who were Communist
sympathizers.
9Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials (cont.)
- Shortly after the end of World War I, a Red
Scare took hold of the nation. Named after the
red flag of the USSR (now Russia), the Reds
were seen as a threat to the democracy of the
United States. Fear, paranoia, and hysteria
gripped the nation, and many innocent people were
questioned and then jailed for expressing any
view which was seen as anti-Democratic or
anti-American.
- In June of 1940, Congress passed the Alien
Registration Act, which required anyone who was
not a legal resident of the United States to file
a statement of their occupational and personal
status, which included a record of their
political beliefs. The House Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC), which was
established in 1938, had the job of investigating
those who were suspected of overthrowing or
threatening the democracy of the U.S. As the
Alien Registration Act gathered the information,
the HUAC began hunting down those who were
believed to be a threat to American beliefs.
10Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials (cont.)
- The HUAC established that Communist beliefs were
being spread via mass media. At this time, movies
were becoming more liberal, and therefore, were
believed to be a threat many felt that Hollywood
was attempting to propagandize Communist beliefs.
In September of 1947, the HUAC subpoenaed
nineteen witnesses (most of whom were actors,
directors, and writers) who had previously
refused to comment, claiming their Fifth
Amendment rights. Eleven of the seventeen were
called to testify only one actually spoke on the
standthe remaining ten refused to speak and were
labeled the Hollywood Ten.
11Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials (cont.)
- After these infamous ten refused to speak,
executives from the movie industry met to decide
how best to handle the bad press. They decided to
suspend all ten without pay. Although the initial
intention was to save their box office
reputation, what eventually resulted was as
decade-long blacklist. Hundreds of people who
worked in the industry were told to point the
finger naming those who had any affiliation with
the Communist party. As a result, over 200 people
lost their jobs and were unable to find anyone
who would hire them. The Communist with-hunt
ruined the careers of hundreds, and ruined the
reputation of hundreds more.
12Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials (cont.)
- In February of 1950, a Republican senator from
Wisconsin names Joseph McCarthy claimed to have a
list of over 200 card-carrying members of the
Communist party. By 1951, a new flourish of
accusations began and a new wave were subpoenaed
to name namesto snitch on those who were
Communists or believed to be Communist
sympathizers. Later, the terms McCarthy Trials
and McCarthyism were coined, which described the
anti-Communist movement and trials of the 1950s.
13Historical Context The Red Scare and McCarthy
Trials (cont.)
- Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible in 1953, after
witnessing first-hand the modern witch-hunt that
had taken place in the United States. Miller
wrote the controversial play as an allegory, a
play which represents something much deeper. In
this case, the story is about the Salem witch
trials of the 1690s, but warns of history
repeating these tragic events on the 1950s.
14Miller Reacts to a Witch Hunt
- I had known about the Salem witchcraft
phenomenon since my American history class at
the University of Michigan, but it had remained
in my mind as one of those inexplicable
mystifications of the long-dead past when people
commonly believed that the spirit could leave the
body - As though it had been ordained, a copy of Marion
Starkeys book The Devil in Massachusetts fell
into my hands, and the bizarre story came back as
I had recalled it, but this time in remarkably
well-organized detail.
15Miller Reacts to a Witch Hunt
- At first I rejected the idea of a play on the
subject. My own rationality was too strong, I
thought, to really allow me to capture this
wildly irrational outbreak. A drama cannot merely
describe an emotion, it has to become that
emotion. But gradually, over weeks, a living
connection between myself and Salem, and between
Salem and Washington, was made in my mindfor
whatever else they might be, I saw that the
hearings in Washington were profoundly and
avowedly ritualistic. After all, in almost every
case the Committee knew in advance what they
wanted the witness to give them the names of his
comrades in the Communist Party. The FBI had
long since infiltrated the Party, and informers
had long ago identified the participants in
various meetings. The main point of the hearings,
precisely as in seventeenth-century Salem, was
that the accused make public confession, damn his
confederates as well as his Devil master, and
guarantee his sterling new allegiance by breaking
disgusting old vowswhereupon he was let loose to
rejoin the society of extremely decent people. In
other words, the same spiritual nugget lay folded
within both proceduresan act of contrition done
not in solemn privacy but out in public air.
16Miller Reacts to a Witch Hunt (cont.)
- The Salem prosecution was actually on more solid
legal ground since the defendant, if guilty of
familiarity with the Unclean One the Devil, had
broken a law against the practice of witchcraft,
a civil as well as a religious offense whereas
the offender against HUAC could not be accused of
any such violation but only of a spiritual crime,
subservience to a political enemys desires and
ideology. He was summoned before the Committee to
be called a bad name, but one that could destroy
his career.
17Miller Reacts to a Witch Hunt (cont.)
- In effect, it came down to a governmental decree
of moral guilt that could easily be made to
disappear by ritual speech intoning names of
fellow sinners and recanting former beliefs. This
last was probably the saddest and truest part of
the charade, for by the early 1950s there were
few, and even fewer in the arts, who had not left
behind their illusions about the Soviets.
- It was this immaterial element, the surreal
spiritual transaction, that now fascinated me,
for the rituals of guilt and confession followed
all the forms of a religious inquisition, except,
of course, that the offended parties were not God
and his ministers but a congressional committee
18Notes from Christopher Bigsbys Introduction to
the play
- The question is not the reality of witches but
the power of authority to define the nature of
the real, and the desire, on the part of
individuals and the state, to identify those
whose purging will relieve a sense of anxiety and
guilt. What lay behind the procedures of both
witch trial and political hearing was a familiar
American need to assert a recoverable innocence
even if the only guarantee of such innocence lay
in the displacement of guilt onto others. To
sustain the integrity of their own names, the
accused were invited to offer the names of
others, even though to do so would be to make
them complicit in procedures they despised and
hence to damage their sense of themselves. And
here is a theme that connects virtually all of
Millers plays betrayal, of the self no less
than of others.
19Notes (continued)
- in Millers plays there usually comes a moment
when the central character cries out his own
name, determined to invest it with meaning and
integrity. Almost invariably this moment occurs
when he is on the point of betraying himself and
others. A climactic scene in The Crucible occurs
when John Proctor, on the point of trading his
integrity for his life, finally refuses to pay
the price, which is to offer the names of others
to buy his lifeThree years later, Miller himself
was called before the Committee. His reply, when
asked to betray others, was a virtual paraphrase
of the one offered by Proctor. He announced, I
am trying to, and will protect my sense of
myself. I could not use the name of another
person and bring trouble on him.
20Notes (continued)
- The Crucible is Arthur Millers most
frequently produced play not, I think, because it
addresses affairs of the state nor even because
it offers us the tragic sight of a man who dies
to save his conception of himself and the world,
but because audiences understand all too well
that the breaking of charity is no less a truth
of their own lives than it is an account of
historical processesThe Crucible reminds us how
fragile is our grasp on those shared values that
are the foundation of any society.
21Notes (continued)
- Beyond anything else The Crucible is a study in
power and the mechanisms by which power is
sustained, challenged, and lostIn the landscape
of The Crucible, on the one hand stands the
church, which provides the defining language
within which all social, political, and moral
debate is conducted. On the other stand those
usually deprived of powerthe black slave Tituba
and the young childrenwho suddenly gain access
to an authority as absolute as that which had
previously subordinated themThose socially
marginalized move to the very center of social
actionThe Crucible is a play about the seductive
nature of power
22Notes (continued)
- The Crucible is both an intense psychological
drama and a play of epic proportionsthis is a
drama about an entire community betrayed by a
Dionysian surrender to the irrational it is
also, however, a play about the redemption of an
individual and, through the individual, of a
society. Some scenes, therefore, people the stage
with characters, while others show the individual
confronted by little more than his own
conscience. That oscillation between the public
and the private is a part of the rhythmic pattern
of the play.
23Notes (continued)
- the plays success now owes little to the
political and social context in which it was
written. It stands, instead, as a study of the
debilitating power of guilt, the seductions of
power, the flawed nature of the individual and of
the society to which the individual owes
allegiance. It stands as a testimony to the ease
with which we betray those very values essential
to our survival, but also the courage with which
some men and women can challenge what seems to be
a ruling orthodoxy.
24Notes (continued)
- Like so many of Millers other plays, it is a
study of a man who wishes, above all, to believe
that he has invested his life with meaning, but
cannot do so if he betrays himself through
betraying others. It is a study of a society that
believes in its unique virtues and seeks to
sustain that dream of perfection by denying all
possibility of its imperfectionAmerica is to
believe that it is at the same time both guilty
and without flaw.
25Sources
- The Crucible Literature Guide. Secondary
Solutions, 2006. - The Crucible. Latitudes. Perfection Learning,
1995. - Christopher Bigsbys Introduction in the Penguin
Books version of The Crucible, 1995.