1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Sholpan [36]
2 years ago
9

THESE ARE ABOUT ACT FOUR OF THE CRUCIBLE

English
2 answers:
lisabon 2012 [21]2 years ago
8 0
1. Use evidence from the play to show how Arthur Miller conveys one of the following themes:
<span>1.         Fear and suspicion are infectious and can produce a mass hysteria that destroys public order and rationality.</span>
<span>2.         It is more noble to die with integrity than to live with compromised principles that harm others.</span>

<span>3.         The ideas of witchcraft and “the devil’s work” in The Crucible are extended metaphors for Communism. 

2. </span>Act IV opens in a Salem jail cell. It is the day when Rebecca Nurse and John Proctor are to be hanged. Both have resisted confessing up to that point, but Rev. Hale – previously unseen at the court since Proctor’s arrest – is trying to encourage their confession. Even though he knows their confession would be a lie, he wants to save their lives. Rev. Parris is also trying to get them to confess, but that’s because he wants to save his own life: since the trials began, Parris has received some not-so-subtle threats to his life. To make matters worse, Abigail has fled, taking all of Parris’s money with her.

Since Proctor went to jail, over one hundred people have restored their lives by “confessing” to witchcraft, but the town is in shambles. There are orphans, cows wandering all over the place, and people bickering over who gets whose property.

Judge Hathorne and Danforth call upon Elizabeth, still imprisoned, to talk to her husband to see if she can get him to confess. When Elizabeth finally agrees to speak with Proctor (who has been in the dungeon, separated from the other accused), the married couple finally gets a few private moments alone in the courthouse. In these warm exchanges, Elizabeth says she will not judge what Proctor decides to do, and affirms that she believes he is a good man. While Elizabeth will not judge Proctor, she herself cannot confess to witchcraft, as it would be a lie.

Proctor asks for Elizabeth’s forgiveness, and she says he needs to forgive himself. Elizabeth also says she realizes she had been a “cold wife,” which might have driven him to sleep with Abigail. She asks him for forgiveness and says she has never known such goodness in all her life as his. At first, this gives Proctor the determination to live, and he confesses verbally to Danforth and Hathorne.

But Proctor cannot bring himself to sign the “confession.” Knowing that the confession will be pinned to the church door, for his sons and other community members to see, is too much for Proctor to bear. Moreover, he will not incriminate anyone else in the town as a witch. He believes it should be enough to confess verbally and to only incriminate himself. When the court refuses this, Proctor, deeply emotional, tears up the written confession and crumples it. Shocked, Rev. Hale and Rev. Parris plead with Elizabeth to talk sense into her husband, but she realizes that this is, at last, his moment of redemption: “He have his goodness now. God forbid I take it from him!” And so he goes to his death. The curtain falls as we hear the drum beat just before John Proctor is hanged. 

Eva8 [605]2 years ago
7 0

1. The most obvious example of how it is more noble to die with integrity than to live with compromised principles that harm others is that of Proctor, and his refusal to confess. In Act IV, Proctor is pressured to confess to witchcraft. However, he knows that he has not commited that crime. Initially, he signs. However, afterwards he retracts. This idea most likely relates to the McCarthy era because during this time period, people were harrased due to their beliefs. Moreover, they were also pressured to confess to wrongdoings and to retract their ideological statements.

2. Hale is different from the other ministers in that he truly wants to get to the truth. Although Hale is initially convinced of witchcraft, when he changes his mind he attempts to rectify his opinions. This suggests that he has more integrity and less pride than other ministers who cannot accept that they are wrong. However, by the time he wants to rectify his actions, it is too late.

3. Arthur Miller wanted to show that McCarthy's Senate committee operated as a witch hunt. This means that they were persecuting people due to their political beliefs, even when there was no evidence of wrongdoing. The fact that the people in the play have no evidence of witchcraft, and yet decide to kill people compares to how McCarthy was willing to destroy people's careers even when there was no real evidence of damage caused by them.

4. The play suggests that the motives behind McCarthy's political "witch hunts" were more related to pride, vanity and closed-mindedness than to any real political danger. Miller implies that McCarthy persecuted those with particular ideologies simply because he disagreed with them, and not because he had any real evidence of wrongdoings.

You might be interested in
Which genres of fiction are notable in Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis?
11111nata11111 [884]
<span>Allegorical, Surrealistic.

Surrealism is a story that has dreamlike qualities in which the narrative has absurd or unrealistic elements. In Metamorphosis, Gregor becomes a giant insect. This is rather absurd and unrealistic. An allegory is when a story has a hidden meaning. Is Metamorphosis just about a guy turned into a bug? No. It's also about the alienating nature of society. Throughout the story, Gregor has no real friends with people outside of his family. Once he becomes a bug, even that is gone. </span>
5 0
3 years ago
A ___ ,added to the beginning of a word, can add to or change its meaning
elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]
The answer would be c. prefix
6 0
2 years ago
HELP WILL GIVE BRANLIEST!!! If anyone has read the novel “The Hate You Give” give me 3 reasons why the Carter family should move
horrorfan [7]

Answer:

Explanation:

Starr’s flashback to Natasha’s death complicates our understanding of Starr’s grief and fear because Khalil’s death signals that attending Williamson did not make Starr’s life safer. Now Starr has lost two best friends, each one killed by violence in her community, and in both cases, Starr narrowly escaped becoming a victim herself. Lisa addressed the gang issue by sending Starr to Williamson, but this move could not address the dangers of the police. One-Fifteen shot Khalil because he believed that Khalil being black made him dangerous. Therefore, racism against black people put Starr in danger during Khalil’s murder, not Garden Heights or the type of blackness associated with Garden Heights. Williamson cannot keep Starr safe because existing as a black girl in a racist society is not safe. Some of her fear comes from the realization that distancing herself from life in Garden Heights did not actually protect her.

 

Chapter Three introduces the way Garden Heights residents look out for each other’s welfare, breaking the stereotype of it being a bleak, dangerous neighborhood. In fact, the dangers of Garden Heights create a situation in which neighbors bond together. Business owners take an active interest in the community, like Mr. Reuben, who rewards good students, encouraging them toward the academic achievement not expected in poor neighborhoods. While Starr must minimize her poverty around her Williamson friends, the residents of Garden Heights treat poverty as a condition to be alleviated, not to be ashamed of, as with Mrs. Rooks’s immediate action to raise money for Khalil’s family. However, not all help in Garden Heights is genuine. King offers Starr money because he expects Maverick to help him hide a drug shipment, showcasing the way he mimics the genuine generosity of other Garden Heights residents for his own devices.

Maverick and Uncle Carlos’s argument sets up an important dichotomy between them that maps directly onto Starr’s two worlds. Maverick is the Garden Heights father, who prioritizes a vision of blackness that operates independently from white people. Uncle Carlos is the Williamson father, who through his life in a gated community and employment as a cop has assimilated into whiteness. Their clashes throughout the novel evoke two different expressions of being black. They also map onto the two sources of violence in Garden Heights: Maverick as a former gang member and Uncle Carlos as a police officer. At this juncture, the clear animosity between them and their separate worldviews seem irreconcilable, emphasized by their being tied with the separate worlds of Garden Heights and the suburbs. However, the clear love Maverick and Uncle Carlos feel for Starr represents the potential for both these kinds of blackness to form who Starr will be.

The difficult visit to Khalil’s family introduces the way stereotypes of blackness flatten the complexity of black lives into caricatures. Because Starr has just overheard Uncle Carlos call Khalil dangerous, she is keenly aware that stereotyping Khalil as a drug dealer can erase his humanity even to people who knew him. She also knows it affects the way he will function as a “hashtag,” a talking point in the social media backlash against his death, because he was not a perfect victim. This framing reduces the value of Khalil’s life to his utility in the fight against police violence. Ms. Rosalie’s unconditional love for Khalil re-centers Starr’s thoughts and reminds her that nothing can make Khalil just a drug dealer or just a hashtag. Even if no one can use Khalil’s story because of the connotations of being a drug dealer, Khalil was still loved by his family and friends.

5 0
2 years ago
15+ I give Brainliest!!!
pickupchik [31]

Answer:

But the rose-colour swiftly faded." I emphasize with this phrase/quote as it symbolises  that the warmth of the colour rose was fading away, which shows that something dreadful had occured for this to happen. The verb "swiftly" means quickly showing a quite similarity of someones life ending. Comparing to the rest of the extract this phrase shows how the sky was drained out of its colour. This phrase implies the sky is slowly loosing its happy touch which gives off some sort of hope to the reader.

8 0
2 years ago
Find I have a sense of satisfaction whenever I learn that there is a new field being opened up where women may enter. A woman wi
enyata [817]

Answer:

Since woman don't have as much academic and business opportunities as men do, the author expresses her joy when knowing that a woman has a chance to be in a successful field of career and freedom. The author expresses that they are satisfied by knowing that a woman has the freedom to embark on a new journey towards life and charisma.

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • interpret how are key ideas refined with clear and concise language in the section ""what are our demands?"" what purpose does t
    5·1 answer
  • Is the underlined clause independent or subordinate? 
    9·2 answers
  • What is the difference between accused of and charge with
    10·2 answers
  • “Darkness” is straightforward and detailed and does not require much inference. True or false?
    7·2 answers
  • What type of population density dependence focuses on abiotic factors? A. K-level density dependence B. R-level density dependen
    6·2 answers
  • "Algebra is a precursor for calculus because it will help students to be successful in the latter course."
    15·2 answers
  • there are 5280 feet in one mile Hannah likes to walk 5 miles each week for exercise how many feet does Hannah walk each week
    7·2 answers
  • Rukmani s parents are proud of the fact that their daughter knows how to read, but her new husband is ashamed. t/f
    14·1 answer
  • WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST IF YOU HELP ME OUT
    9·1 answer
  • Read the poem:
    5·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!