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Part A

Write down all of the critical questions you hope to answer ahead of time. Then, record your conclusions—along with the supporting text—as you progress through the reading. The table has sample questions you can use, or you can delete them and use your own. Be sure to include questions that relate to character development and theme analysis.

Question Analysis Textual Evidence
What is the play about?
What are the settings, motivations, or societal values in which the play was written?
What kinds of literary techniques does the play use?
Which character(s) shows external character development?
Which character(s) shows internal character development?
Where do these common themes show up in the text?
fear
persecution
power
control

User Clark Kent
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2 Answers

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19 votes

Answer: ALL IN ORDER

1. its a look at the era of the Salem witch trials. The fear and violence that went with it.

2.Arthur Miller is a playwright from the united states who wrote The Crucible in 1952, Thus the play was written in the aftermath of World War II, which ended in 1945, and at a time when the united states was growing increasingly concerned about the Soviet Union's rising power.

3.Throughout the play Arthur Miller used the themes, tone, and various types of irony. Of course he used a variety of other literary devices, including imagery syntax,diction, and figurative language too.

4. A drama.

5. The doll found in the house symbolizes witchcraft and voodoo.

6. The crucible has a slew of main characters, but the Reverands are some of the most important ones.

Step-by-step explanation:

Easier to copy and paste from here :-)

User Petehern
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21 votes
21 votes

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

I changed some of the questions--which I was allowed to do in my case.

Part A Write down all of the critical questions you hope to answer ahead of time. Then-example-1
User Jbarat
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