Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to
represent abstract ideas or concepts.
The Witch Trials and McCarthyism
There is little symbolism within The
Crucible, but, in its entirety, the play can be seen as symbolic of the
paranoia about communism that pervaded America in the 1950s. Several parallels
exist between the House Un-American Activities Committee’s rooting out of
suspected communists during this time and the seventeenth-century witch-hunt
that Miller depicts in The Crucible, including the narrow-mindedness,
excessive zeal, and disregard for the individuals that characterize the
government’s effort to stamp out a perceived social ill. Further, as with the
alleged witches of Salem, suspected Communists were encouraged to confess their
crimes and to “name names,” identifying others sympathetic to their radical
cause. Some have criticized Miller for oversimplifying matters, in that while
there were (as far as we know) no actual witches in Salem, there were certainly
Communists in 1950s America. However, one can argue that Miller’s concern in The
Crucible is not with whether the accused actually are witches, but rather
with the unwillingness of the court officials to believe that they are not. In
light of McCarthyist excesses, which wronged many innocents, this parallel was
felt strongly in Miller’s own time.
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