Similarities Between A Doll's House And Trifles

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In the play, A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen and Trifles by Susan Glaspell many issues arise primarily dealing with societal and gender roles. A central issue in both plays is the position of women in society which both Nora Helmer and Minnie Wright face in their lives. In addition, the women faced limitations and confinement; however, much controversy rose with the desperate measures Nora and Minnie took in order to exercise the freedom they desired.
In A Doll House, Nora had always been seen either as a daughter, mother or wife in the men’s world that governed her life, her father and her husband, Torvald Helmer. She was never her own woman or even “before all else, a human being” (Ibsen 938). She is limited to the fulfillment of the role of women in the male-dominated society she lived in. Torvald constantly …show more content…

Wright suffers from emotional abuse. She became isolated and her only friend was her caged bird. A comparison is made by Mrs. Hale stating, “[Mrs. Wright] was kind of like a bird herself’ (949). She equates Mrs. Wright to the bird, both caged and restrained. Mr.Wright fails to realize that Mrs. Wright is lonely and she is limited to her household, not being able to experience some of the things she did when she was simply Minnie Foster. Mr. Wright had always been a man of few words yet he was controlling and “a hard man” causing Mrs. Wright her imprisonment in a cruel form (949). Not only that but Mr. Wright killed her bird, the only source of joy and company for Mrs. Wright. That action drives her decision to kill Mr. Wright leading to freedom from him. The men investigating the case, the court attorney, the sheriff, and Mr. Hale, will never discover that she committed the murder because they do not see her as capable of doing it. And because Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peter empathized with her and hid the evidence, it seems that Mrs. Wright will experience freedom to its fullest at that

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