Explore One Conflict Per Unit 3 American Drama Pr

Explore One Conflict Per Unit 3 American Drama Pr

The audience for this paper should be an imaginary
classmate, a student your age, who has read the crucible through once but
has not yet studied it to understand it on a deeper level.

Your paper will be analytical in purpose. This means
that your ultimate goal is to choose significant moments, quotes, or
techniques from the play, present them, and explain how they work
together to create larger meaning. Your paper will analyze three related conflicts from The Crucible by Arthur Miller.

Your three conflicts must be related.
(Do not just choose the first three conflicts you can think of.) For
example, you could write about three conflicts within one character,
such as Proctor’s conflict with the court or “justice” in general,
Proctor’s interpersonal conflict with Abigail, and Proctor’s internal
conflict of guilt. Or, you could write about three characters (perhaps
Mary, Elizabeth, and Proctor) who conflict with the court. You will
explore one conflict per body paragraph. Each paragraph will:

  • Summarize: Explain the conflict.
  • Discuss the scope: Is the conflict between two people? A person and an idea? Or between the person and their conscience?
  • Interpret: What does this conflict mean? What is
    Miller using this conflict to say or show about life, truth, humanity,
    paranoia, or another theme?
  • Relate: How do these conflicts relate to and build on the others?
  • Support: Use at least two quotes from the play.

Your conclusion will tie all of these conflicts together. Your body
paragraphs should build into an insight, or an overall message or theme
that Miller conveys through The Crucible. Your conclusion will vary
depending on what conflicts you choose. Do all the conflicts relate to
one theme, like “justice” or “paranoia”? Or do they show how a character
changes over the course of the story? A summary of your paper will not
be sufficient for your conclusion ­ you must discuss what the conflicts mean.

This essay should be between three and five pages (750-­1250 words)
in length. Your final draft should be saved and submitted as .doc or
.pdf file. It should be in 12­-point font in Times New Roman.