McCarthyism vs. The Crucible In the 1950’s, a senator named Joseph McCarthy was running wild through America trying to dig up underground Communist sympathizers. He believed that there were over 200 of them working inside of the United States government. His fear caused people to panic and they began to accuse each other. Those who were accused were blacklisted and had a very difficult time finding jobs. Among the guilty, was the author of The Crucible, Arthur Miller. He saw the mania of the country
McCarthyism and The Crucible Communists are hidden in the government, and it is my job to weed them out. In Joseph McCarthy’s mind, this was his duty to track down communist and communist sympathizers. Throughout Wisconsin senator Joseph McCarthy’s career, he became widely known for his uncommon ideas of traitors planted in the Government. He went through great measures to discover the unfaithful and publicly trial those. Perhaps the biggest outcome was publicly naming ten people as communists in
In the late 1940's there was a rivalry between the U.S. and Soviet Russia also known as the cold war. As the war intensified the U.S. began to analyze and determine whether citizens were loyal to their country. This was called the Red Scare. The U.S. were scared of communist because of their alliance to the red soviet flag. Communism is an economic system in which everyone is equal and the government owns everything. Of course people disagree. Joseph McCarthy a former American politician who served
Marcellus Benton Mrs.Minor English 3 26 September 2015 The Crucible: Religion and Politics The Crucible, a play written by Arthur Miller, was written in the early 1950s during a period after World War II where the American government became paranoid of the spread of communism from the Soviet Union. These political ties can be seen within The Crucible, where the community of Salem became paranoid of the spread of witchery and the effect that had on their community. Due to these hysterias the American
In the article “Why I Wrote The Crucible”, Arthur Miller explores the relationship he observed between Joseph McCarthy's hunt for “Reds” and the Salem witch trials. Miller explains how the similarities led him to write The Crucible. The article makes the reader question if there are still witch hunts today. The play was written right after World War II, which ended in 1945, and was written when the United States was becoming concerned of the Soviet Union gaining so much power. According to a number