Susan Glaspell's Trifles

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The coming together of women in “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell is generated by the injustice of women in the twentieth century. The moral of this play was to bring women together in a time they were put down by the beliefs of men. The men saw women as a joke, and women weren’t considered valuable in society. Women were treated with disrespect because they were considered unequal to men. After noticing the harsh treatment of fellow women, the women decide they will not notify the men about the evidence leading to the murder of Mr. Wright. Suzy Clarkson Holstein states, “An exploration of the play reveals a fundamental difference between the women’s actions and the men’s, a difference grounded in varying understandings of the home space (Holstein …show more content…

However, ironically, this movement is accomplished in a secret way and in silence against the male dominated justice system. The women in Trifles illustrate this support, when another country woman is suspected of murder is subjected to an unequal judgment by men and without referring to the actual motive of the action. This is demonstrated in the play when Mrs. Hale attempts to clear the evidence of anger in Mrs. Wright, who is suspected of murder, by pulling out few stitches on the quilt that are not sewed well, which could have been some sign of anger in Mrs. Wright. (Trifles 143). Therefore, as it is clearly indicated, Mrs. Hale is not pleased with the way Mrs. Wright is being suspected of murder when the County Attorney does not consider the initial possible motive for such an action, though, she conveys her reasons for her support for Mrs. Wright by saying: "Bad sewing always make me fidgety" (Trifles 143). This indicates Mrs. Hale's frustration with the structure of Justice System of the time in America, when women were not equal to men in many aspects such as having freedom of speech and equal rights compared to

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