Trifles Gender Roles

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The one-act play “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell shares a theme with “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen; the role of women is central to the plot. The play starts as a group of people, three men and two women, enter a house to find evidence pertaining to a recent murder. The men consist of the county attorney, the sheriff, and a neighbor of the victim and suspect. The women are both wives of two of the men: the sheriff’s wife, Mrs. Peters, and the neighbor’s wife, Mrs. Hale. The men go about the house looking for evidence to the murder, while initially the women are concerned with the preserves Minnie Wright, the accused murderer, had stored for the winter and the quilt she was making. The men mock the women for being concerned with “trifles” and continue about their manly business. …show more content…

They first discovered some stitching on Minnie Wright’s quilt that looked unruly, and deduced that she was nervous. Mrs. Hale, the neighbor, knew Minnie whereas Mrs. Peters did not. At this point, Mrs. Hale undid the messed up stitches and they started, almost inadvertently, making excuses for Mrs. Wright. Next, they discussed what Mr. Wright was like, since Mrs. Peters didn’t know the couple well. Mrs. Hale tells her newfound friend that she stopped visiting the Wrights because it wasn’t cheerful there, that Mr. Wright was a hard man, and not much company. She makes it sound like Mr. Wright sucked the life out of Minnie. This is especially evident when she compares her to a bird (at that point they’d found the cage but not the bird). She says, “come to think of it, she was kind of like a bird herself—real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and—fluttery. How—she—did—change.” This plays a key role later

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