Respuesta :
Tituba is pressured into confessing. I believe she figures she has no other choice but to give them what they want to hear. She's a slave and would likely get punishment if she didn't confess, so she did this to not be severely punished.
What motivates Tituba to suddenly offer the names after having denied being under the spell of the Devil earlier in the scene is:
Fear. Tituba is threatened by her master, Reverend Parris, and by Mr. Putnam. They talk of whipping her to death and hanging her, respectively.
- In the play "The Crucible," which concerns the Salem witch trials, Tituba is a slave from Barbados.
- She does not hold any power or influence whatsoever. She is at the mercy of practically everyone else, especially her master, Reverend Parris.
- At first, Tituba does not want to confess to practicing witchcraft.
- However, fear becomes a strong motivation for her to confess. After all, she is told she will be whipped to death or hanged if she does not confess.
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