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Susan Glaspell's Trifles

Decent Essays

Trifles is a play written by Susan Glaspell in 1916 about the investigation of a murder. Together the sheriff and his wife, the county attorney, and a neighboring couple, study a murder case in the home where it occurred. The two women pay more attention to the makeup of the home rather than the police report, which gave them an advantage in finding evidence. In the play Trifles, women challenge the stereotype of male dominance through the author’s use of symbolism and diction to find evidence for the murder case at hand. First, symbolism played a large role in Trifles. The singing bird caged in the damaged birdcage symbolizes Mrs. Wright’s life. It is not known whether she suffered physical abuse, but the text suggests that there was mental abuse. At the time this play was written, there was no help for abused women, so it was unlikely for her act on her injustice. She was caged from the outside world and all things that were cheerful by her husband. Her only way out of this sad, depressed state was a sweet …show more content…

In Trifles, the reader can clearly see the men’s poor treatment of the women. Mrs. Hale, the neighbor’s wife, was first very observant of the unfinished quilts Mrs. Wright had left behind, exclaiming that, “all the rest of [the sewing] has been so nice and even. And look at this! It’s all over the place!” (ll. 212) Then, Mrs. Hale, being her inquisitive self, pondered over what would make Mrs. Wright so nervous. Also, after the county attorney’s remarks about the dirty towels in the house, Mrs. Hale reminded him that men’s hands get dirty quickly on a farm such as the Wright’s; however, he made the remark that she was being “loyal to [her] sex.” (ll. 108) In that society it seemed they had to be loyal to their sex by the way the men were treating the women. This could be another reason for Mrs. Wright’s

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