Hysteria In The Crucible

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In “The Crucible,” Arthur Miller conveys to readers the way in which hysteria plays a significant role during the Salem Witch trials and the actions that fear often leads people to take. Hysteria results in people questioning their neighbors whom they have seen as righteous people all their lives, and leads to many false accusations of witchcraft in the Puritan society. Witchcraft is an unseen crime, which intensifies the fear among colonists who do not know whom they can trust anymore. Everyone becomes a suspect, and neighbors start labeling each other as devil worshippers. This all starts when Tituba is praised for confessing and naming “witches,” which leads Abigail to believe that she can do the same to further herself from any trouble.

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