The Crucible Rhetorical Analysis

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Pages: 1

The playwright to begin with, already tells the reader what to expect by drawing in his reasoning, that the witch trials and the anti-communist trials were history repeating itself, for producing The Crucible (Paragraph 1). More complex, by informing the reader of the threatening action he was put under by American Legion to sign an anti-communist declaration, he frightfully implies the rhetorical question, “what right had any organisation to demand anyone's pledge of loyalty?” With this experience, the anti-communist rage gives the audience insight of the dangers it meant to be communist, similar to the social norms in Salem. If one did not believe in God, or had any association with the Devil, that person would have been unrecognizable to