Themes And Symbolism In Susan Glaspell's Trifles

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In Susan Glaspell’s short Trifles, Mrs. Wright is being accused of murdering her former husband Mr. Wright. While their house is being investigated, there are a lot of clues that suggest what could’ve happened between Mr. and Mrs. Wright. Susan Glaspell uses many literal techniques throughout the story to give readers a depiction of what’s going on. Glaspell uses irony, symbolism, and themes to distinguish Mrs. Wright’s role in the murder and her character in the story.
Glaspell utilizes irony from the title to the story. The male characters are the specialists on the scene. The author gives the men titles like "sheriff" and "region lawyer" while the ladies are on the scene to simply serve as the helping hand while the men work. The men settle on the investigative choices. They choose to go upstairs to see the murder scene, as they accept this is the most important part of the examination. The ladies are left down the stairs in the kitchen, of all rooms. Though the men expected to find the most evidence of what happened, the women, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters, actually …show more content…

In the home, the spouse was the best and the wife to submit to the husbands every need. Once she was married most of her duties consisted of raising youngsters and cleaning; she very seldom got assistance from Mr. Wright. Mrs. Hale made it clear that she was very unhappy with the way she had to live now. Mrs. Wright invested quite a bit of her energy in the kitchen, cooking, heating, canning, and stirring the stove fire. In "relaxation" hours, she sewed, weaved, darned, and knitted. Ladies who worked outside the home generally held occupations as secretaries, agents, servers, caretakers, servants, washerwomen, and unskilled workers in

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