preview

What Is The Theme Of A Jury Of Her Peers Essay

Decent Essays

A Jury of Her Peers is a short story by Susan Glaspell that focuses on the interaction of men and women and how badly women were treated back in that time period. The story revolves around the murder mystery of John Wright in his own house. George Henderson, the district attorney, Lewis Hale with his wife Martha Hale, a couple whom were close neighbors to the Wrights, and Henry Peters, the sheriff, with his wife, Mrs. Peters. While the three men look for evidence to incriminate Minnie Wright, the wife of John Wright who was present during his death, Martha and Mrs. Peters discover clues and evidence that proves Minnie Wright killed John Wright. The reason why the women are able to place together the evidence and find the missing pieces is because …show more content…

Since the beginning of time, men had always been on the top while degrading the women and telling them they only serve as maids in the house. In the case of the Wrights, the author makes the reader wonder what it would have been like to live with Mr. Wright and how Mrs. Wright felt about living in poor conditions because both of them do not appear in the story. It is through Mrs. Hale that the reader gets a sense of before and after life of Mrs. Wright. Mrs. Hale used to be friends with Minnie Foster, who was always cheering and happy around people. She explained that after the marriage, she never went to visit because she hated the house and the owner, blaming him for not giving Minnie the respect she deserved. The three men that were inspecting the house for clues to incriminate Minnie Foster were blinded by ridiculing the ‘womanly’ things that Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters were talking and doing while waiting. Because of this, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters quickly uncover the truth by telling each other their backstories. Mrs. Peters also mentions that a person gets discourage and loses heart. The men misunderstood the act as some kind of ‘mental’ issue or problem but in truth, Minnie Foster did such horrendous act as killing her husband is somehow justified by the author. Minnie Foster managed to put up with John Wright’s harsh treatment and poor conditions that she had to live in. In conclusion, the short story of A Jury of Her Peers by Susan Glaspell, women are oppressed, misunderstood, and the degradation of their gender which all contributed to the men obliviousness toward womanly things and locations. Because of all three factors, the women solved the puzzle and the mystery surrounding Mrs. Wright and the men left empty-handed towards the police station with no evidence to incriminate

Get Access