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Salem Village, 1692. Mass hysteria has spread throughout the community. Reverend Samuell Parris, a failed businessman, does his best to condemn Tituba, the enslaved Native American housemaid accused of witchcraft by Parris' own household, daughter and niece. Tituba stands out as a historical character gifted enough to manipulate the jury with a force of character adequate to serve as a source of inspiration to post-modern feminism. Does her confession mean she really was guilty of witchcraft? And what really happened to her subsequently?