Paris: "Yes, dress ... I thought I saw it - someone was naked in the forest." Arthur Miller's theater "The Crucible" has many themes. Some of these topics are more prominent than others. These themes will be hysterical, reputable and hypocritical. These themes run throughout the script from start to finish. When you think of the Puritan religion, you may think of a very good, morally perfect society. This does not apply to Salem, Massachusetts. In fact, the opposite also applies to play. There are everything you do not want in society, such as liars, fraud, stealing.
Arthur Miller's moral "Kuzaki" Krugersburg is a screenplay on the relationship between crime and delusions, hysteria and religious intolerance. In 1692, Salim of Arthur Miller decided to consider an unorthodox private life. The Salem government and the Massachusetts state government as a whole are the priesthood systems whose legal system is based on the Bible. - Miller captured the delusion and hatred of the Salem Witch trial in 1692 and presented a controversial mention about witch hunting in his own society during the 1950's McCarthy. In only 146 pages, Miller tells us stories such as John Procter, Elizabeth Procter, Abigail Williams in the Witch Trial that was held in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692.
The crucible in the "crucible" is about the witch trial in Salem, Massachusetts in the spring of 1692. For Salem people it is hard to believe that their neighbors may be witches who they think are good people. Drama conspiracy is very troubling. At the beginning of the drama, these 14 girls were proud of magic. The town was afraid of magic, so Hysteric began to take over. After that, dozens of people were charged accidentally and no one can blame accusers until too late