1 / 13

The Crucible Act 1: The Overture

The Crucible Act 1: The Overture. a.k.a., What This is All About. Basic Historical Facts 1. Setting of the play : Salem, Massachusetts, 1692 A Puritan settlement about 40 years old . NOTE: The play The Crucible is based on historical events , but it is not history.

sarahg
Télécharger la présentation

The Crucible Act 1: The Overture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Crucible Act 1: The Overture a.k.a., What This is All About

  2. Basic Historical Facts 1 • Setting of the play: Salem, Massachusetts, 1692 A Puritan settlement about 40 years old. NOTE: The play The Crucible is based on historical events, but it is not history.

  3. Basic Historical Facts 2 • Setting: Salem, Massachusetts, 1692 A Puritan settlement about 40 years old. • “Today we would hardly call it a village.”Total population no more than a few hundred people.

  4. Basic Historical Facts 3 • Setting: Salem, Massachusetts, 1692 A Puritan settlement about 40 years old. • “Today we would hardly call it a village.”Total population no more than a few hundred people. • This colony barely registered on the radar of Europe; governments there glad to be rid of “fanatics”

  5. Theocracy 1 • Definition: a form of government where religious authority and civil authority are the same. --> You WILL need to know this! • In most of Massachusetts, religious beliefs held the power of law

  6. Theocracy 2 • In most of Massachusetts, religious beliefs held the power of law • Not unknown even today: Iran, Saudi Arabia. • In this type of government, violating the Ten Commandments, (for example) can get you thrown into jail.

  7. Theocracy 3 • “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live” – Exodus 22:18, the King James Bible • They took this literally, just like the rest of the Bible. • Persecutions for witchcraft a bit of a fad at the time in Europe

  8. “We Are God’s Chidren” 1 • The ancestors of Salem’s inhabitants left Europe for religious freedom; they didn’t allow any of it among their own people.

  9. “We Are God’s Chidren” 2 • The ancestors of Salem’s inhabitants left Europe for religious freedom; they didn’t allow any of it among their own people. • They willingly gave up their own freedom for two reasons: • 1) Sincere religious belief

  10. “We Are God’s Chidren” 3 • The ancestors of Salem’s inhabitants left Europe for religious freedom; they didn’t allow any of it among their own people. • They willingly gave up their own freedom for two reasons: • 1) Sincere religious belief • 2) The need to be united against outside threats to their survival

  11. “We Are God’s Chidren” 4 • Social unity + strict moral codes requiring hard work = greater chance of survival in the New World • (Arthur Miller compares them favorably to Jamestown)

  12. An “Armed Camp” • King Phillip's War – 1675-1678; killed a large percentage of the white people in New England

  13. An “Armed Camp” • King Phillip's War – 1675-1678; killed a significant percentage of the white people in New England • Hostility from Native Americans towards whites universal after this • Indian attacks common, no one very safe

More Related