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Trifles by Susan Glaspell Depicts a World Essay

Related Topics: World Literature Murder World

Pages:2 (805 words)

Sources:1

Subject:People

Topic:Susan Glaspell

Document Type:Essay

Document:#56266549


Trifles by Susan Glaspell depicts a world in which women are ignored in society. The play takes place in the Wright home after Mr. Wright has been murdered. Mr. Peters and Mr. Hale come to the scene to investigate the crime that has taken place. The investigators believed that Mrs. Wright is to blame for her husband's death, but they have no idea why should would do that. As the men's wives -- Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale -- wait downstairs they end up solving the crime by paying attention to what their husbands call "trifles" -- trivial things that they believe have no bearing on the crime. Yet these "trifles" are the keys to the murder. The trifles in the play are symbolic of the many ways in which Mrs. Wright was oppressed. The fact that these "trifles" were found in the kitchen, where women were confined to in that society, is also representative of the oppression that women faced. All of the clues to the solving the murder are found in kitchen "trifles."

First of all, the bird is quite symbolic. The dead canary could be a symbol for what exactly Mrs. Wright is capable of (i.e. murder). It could also be representative of Mr. Wright's oppressive hand and how he killed Mrs. Wright's soul if one were to think of the canary as symbolic of Mrs. Wright's spirit. The fact that the bird is in a special box in the house and not buried somewhere shows that Mrs. Wright didn't mind -- or perhaps even wanted -- others finding it. Why did Mrs. Wright keep the dead bird in the box? This could also point to the idea that the bird is symbolic of Mrs. Wright's soul or freedom because she was similar to this bird -- being kept in the house by an oppressive husband. The dead bird, which was probably one very vocal and full of life, was killed -- its true spirit smashed -- just like Mrs. Wright was probably a different person before she married her husband and he killed her spirit. Mrs. Hale says, "She -- come to think of it, she was kind of like a bird herself -- real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and fluttery" (Myers 938).

The birdcage is another symbolic prop used in "Trifles." The birdcage can be seen as symbolic of the house in which Mrs.…


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Works Cited

Meyer, M. The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature. Bedford/St. Martins; Ninth Edition.

2011. Print.

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