A Jury Of Her Peers Setting Analysis

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While the setting elevated the storytelling and foreshadowed future events in “The Story of an Hour” and “The Yellow Wallpaper,” taking note of the surroundings and using them to decode another person’s state of mind was integral in “A Jury of Her Peers.” In this story, the reader never actually meets Minnie Foster Wright, the woman who felt trapped in her marriage to the point of killing her husband. Instead, Mrs. Martha Hale, an old friend and the wife of a neighbor, and Mrs. Peters, the sheriff’s wife, discover Minnie’s secrets while their husbands investigate the Wright house for evidence. The setting is limited to the downstairs area of the home, which contains a kitchen, storage closets, and a parlor. These places in the house were considered “women’s places” during this time period, which is why …show more content…

One of the most important aspects of the location of “A Jury of Her Peers” is the broken birdcage in the kitchen. The birdcage itself leads one to believe that Minnie had a bird at one point, but it’s broken door implies that, as Mrs. Peters points out, “some one must have been--rough with it,” (Glaspell 155). As Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters continue to find more evidence pointing towards Mr. Wright killing the bird and Minnie killing him in return, the birdcage essentially sheds light on the relationship between Minnie and her husband and on the latter’s abuse of the former. It also serves as a metaphor for Minnie’s life, in that she is caged in her own and marriage and was “killed” by Mr. Wright for trying to find happiness and sing like she once did. With the entire story revolving around solving the mystery of the Wright house through the clues that the limited setting gave, it is the location that provides the foundation of the

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