I chose this
passage because it was a great way to show that Giles was the same old guy when
he was alone as when he was in public. By refusing to just admit to witchcraft
in order to have a swift death he chose to stand up and not stoop to the level
that everyone else was doing by admitting to doing something they didn’t do
just so they could receive a quicker death. By Giles saying “More weight”
before he died it showed resilience, strength, and dedication to what he
believed was right by not taking the easy way out and selling himself when he
didn’t do anything.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Giles Corey
Judgement
What I find most interesting about The Crucible is how something like religion, something thought to give people meaning/purpose in life and bring a society together but instead turns into something so ugly. In Salem there is no private matters everything is pretty much made public, so it is hard to for anyone to be seen as an individual. Having such strong beliefs opens the door for judgement for anything that goes against "social norms". Killing anyone that is accused of witchcraft is a way to restore the social standard or as seen with Abigail used for personal goals.
I feel this book brings up the fact that most people rely on how the public or their peers view them, people will go to great lengths to maintain their reputation. In some cases like in the book maintaining one's reputation means destroying someone else's.
One aspect to learn from John is that perhaps the we shouldn't be afraid of the truth even though it isn't socially acceptable like his adultery with Abigail. People will judge you no matter what but it is worse to be judged on false accusations.
I feel this book brings up the fact that most people rely on how the public or their peers view them, people will go to great lengths to maintain their reputation. In some cases like in the book maintaining one's reputation means destroying someone else's.
One aspect to learn from John is that perhaps the we shouldn't be afraid of the truth even though it isn't socially acceptable like his adultery with Abigail. People will judge you no matter what but it is worse to be judged on false accusations.
The Drama Causer
Abigail Williams is the niece of Reverend Parris.
Abigail's social identity is her promiscuity. Especially in the beginning
when we read about the first interaction in the book with John Proctor.
Abigail says, "She is blackening my name in the village! She is telling
lies about me! She is a cold, sniveling woman, and you bend to her.." She
blames the situation on Goody Proctor, John Proctor's wife, but takes no
responsibility in the role she played in her previous relationship with John
Proctor. During this scene she approaches John a lot and tries to pressure him
into giving in to his feelings for her instead of being faithful to his wife.
Based on what she said she is looking bad in most social situations because of
her open disregard for John Proctor's marriage. Her individual identity
compliments her social identity with her assertiveness. In this scene she
tries to control her relationship with John Proctor by bringing up their past
and being suggestive. She says,” I know how you clutched my back behind your
house and sweated like a stallion whenever I come near.” The language she uses
with him is inappropriate for an unmarried 17 year old girl to be talking to a
married man. She is very firm in what
she thinks and believes especially in the case of what happened between her and
John Proctor. She is very assertive in
the way she argues with him that they had touched before. Abigail is sly in many ways and she knows how
to perform in order to get people to think what she wants them to.
Reverend Hale
In
the Crucible, Reverend Hale (John Hale) is a witch hunter that was called in by
Parris to examine his daughter, Betty. He enters in Act I with his stack of
books for witchcraft. Over his course in the book, his character transforms
more than any other character. He believes that John Proctor and Mary Warren
are telling the truth while on the other hand he thinks Abigail is lying. When
the time came for the trials, it was too late for Reverend Hale to help because
it was no longer in his hands but rather in the hands of Danforth and
theocracy. In his failures to help them made him feel down. His belief in witchcraft
fades and so does his faith in the law. He is the one who told the accused
witches to lie in order for them to save themselves. Hale realizes that the
witch trials are evil and shouldn’t exist.
Reverend Hale’s character stands out
the most for me in this story. We learn that he has the ability to understand
the accused witches and see that they are truly innocent and shouldn’t be held
accountable. His character changed over the course of the story. The once witch
hunter now believes it is wrong to kill innocent women.
Mandrake Root and White Myrtle
Abigail
Williams is, frankly, a little witch (though not in the way the Salem citizens
view the term). In Act Two, Scene 2 (the scene in the Appendix), she really
shows her true colors and what, exactly, her ‘identity’ is within this text. In
fact, through this scene, the reads can see both her individual and social
identity.
The first would be her individual
identity. She paints herself to be nothing more than a victim. The saddest
thing is, however, she really seems to believe herself to be entirely preyed
upon. We see her delusional mind in two places here: first, when she complains
that she “ought be given Godly looks when [she] suffer for them as [she] do”
(149). This sounds just like something the famous Ebony Way stated once in My Immortal. She is complaining that men
find her attractive, and more than that she’s comparing her appearance to that
of God’s, which is probably a huge NO-NO for these people. The second peek into
her psych comes from when she pulls her dress up to show Proctor her ‘wounds.’
When she finishes speaking, Proctor’s next line is started with a
stage-direction that says, “seeing her
madness now” (149). This direction implies that there is nothing there.
There are no “holes from…damned needles and pins” (149). It’s in her head, and
Proctor realizes this; after this, he goes on to try to catch her in her
delusion.
Her social identity does partial come from the point made
before, that Proctor sees her as crazed and lying b…witch, but she continues to
show her true self throughout the rest of the scene. Basically, her entire
reason for spewing lies (as well as likely making herself actually believe
them) is because she’s jealous. She wants Proctor to herself, and hates that he’s
married. She will do anything to make him hers. She wants his wife hanged for
witchcraft. She even says “I will make you such a wife when the world is white
again” (150). The problem is however, she got herself all wrapped up and
confused, thus slipping up. When Proctor tells her that his wife is going to be
tried the next day, she acts like she wasn’t entirely aware of it. This does
not match her previous statement about being with him once everything was good.
Having said that implied that she knew that Mrs. Proctor was on her way to
being “gone.” Abigail is a squirmy-slippery-worm that has both a nasty
individual identity as well as a social one (even if only Proctor sees it).
Oh,
and a side note that I found to be interesting…The witch in the first Witcher is
named Abigail. Only now do I know that it’s a reference to the actual Salem
Witch Trials.
The Witch in All of Us
The intro to The Crucible was very well written. Within the first few paragraphs, as Salem is being described, it is said, "To the European world the whole province was a barbaric frontier inhabited by a sect of fanatics...". To me this is a great line of foreshadowing. The people of Salem have a strong social identity of being hard working, religious followers. They try to represent themselves as the best of the best, fine people. However, when accusations begin, the town collapses on itself. In a truly barbaric way, it becomes a battle of words and belief. It is later written: "The witch-hunt was not, however, a mere repression. It was also, and as importantly, a long overdue opportunity for everyone so inclined to express publicly his guilt and sins, under the cover of accusations against the victims.". The population of Salem revealed their true identities during this time. Built-up feelings, not expressed due to their deep beliefs, could finally run free towards anyone. It is as if these people saw it improper to show feelings. We all know so well though, this cannot lead to anything positive. The Salem Witch Trials were a devastating time in history that proved what a mindset and crowd mentality can do.
A Blockade In Identity
In the Crucible, Abigail and her friends were in the forest
one night dancing around a fire when Reverend Parris saw them. Towards the
middle of the first act, Abigail shows panic as she tries to convince her
friends to lie to everyone despite the rumors of witchcraft. Her length goes as
far as slapping Betty after Betty states that Abigail drank blood to charm
Proctor’s wife into death. This a good example of how secrets at the personal
level can affect a group of people. In this certain situation, the friends
danced and wished for the death of John Proctor’s wife, yet accusations are
being thrown of witchcraft. Abigail’s personal identity is interrupted by her
social identify because of these acts. She went out with a group of friends and
did something that isn’t completely horrid, but now her personal identity has
to pay the consequences. In this case, at worst, a hanging. I can go further
and express how socially determined decisions (which can be compared to peer
pressure, of a sort) can affect one’s life at a personal level. Here, Abigail
must confess or lie. If she confesses, she will be whipped and humiliated; if
not, she may be caught in a lie which will force everyone’s believe towards witchcraft
and she will be hung. Other members of Abigail’s clan are convinced that they
should speak the truth, but Abigail’s personal identity stands in the way of
her making this logical decision with her friends. Furthermore, on the reverse
end of my previous statement, personal identities can stand in the way of
social identities as well.
A Misjudged Woman
Salem is a little town where
everyone knows everyone and there are no secrets. But like in any small town
there can be trouble in paradise. Elizabeth Proctor happened to be a victim in
this town. After horrible accusations that were brought against her by a younger
girl. These accusations were that she was working with or worshiping the
devil. Elizabeth was a good woman who worshiped God and would do anything for
her husband, John Proctor. The reason that Abigail brought such a horrible act
upon Elizabeth that could be punished by death was because of her relationship
with her husband, John Proctor.
Reputation was a huge factor in this novel and played a part in the
outcome. Elizabeth was known as a faithful and a religious woman. Not once was
she ever thought to do the unspeakable that would go against everything she loved.
This was all the act of a wicked child that wanted to get the wife out of the
way so she could have her love affair with Mr. Proctor. After the accusations
were said things changed for Elizabeth. She was arrested along with other women
who are falsely accused. The people were starting to believe what the girls
said instead of Elizabeth and the other women. Life seemed to turn upside down
for Elizabeth Proctor and there seemed to be no end in sight.
A Jury of Her Peers
In A Jury of Her Peers
by Susan Glaspell, I think that the sheriffs’ wife, Mrs. Peters, had a hard
time being herself and following her instincts because she is married to the
sheriff and therefore ‘the law’. In this book, there is a strong sense of male
dominance, and I feel like not only Mrs. Wright felt this, but also Mrs.
Peters. The men usually laughed at what the women thought, so when they found
evidence they decided not to share it with the men. Mrs. Peters understood what
Mrs. Wright was going through because she mentioned how she knows what
stillness is, which is what they believe Mrs. Wright was experiencing. (99). The
problem is that she knows about this stillness but then immediately following
she reminds Mrs. Hale of the law and how they must obey it. I think Mrs. Peters
feels trapped by her marriage with the sheriff. It is one thing to feel stillness
in a relationship. It is another when she is constantly reminded that she must
act a certain way because it is right by the law and her husband. They did not
share the information because they are sympathetic to Mrs. Wright, in the sense
that they understand the feeling of stillness. Mrs. Wright had hope with this
animal, but when her husband took that hope away is when she had nothing to
lose. I think that Mrs. Peters went against the law and with held information
against her husband not only because he wouldn’t believe the women’s theories,
but to stand up to him and be herself, and also to support Mrs. Wright because
they understand her situation.