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Trifles Essay

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Catherine A. Boateng
Prof. Dr. Lucy McNair
ENG 102
November 20th, 2017
Essay 3 Draft I, II & II
World of play in “Trifles” “Trifle” happens in the rural part of Iowa during the winter month in 1900’s, an era where women possessed little voice in the affairs of men. The play took place in an interior of the Wright’s kitchen, which is a confined private space. The landscape of a rundown farmhouse owned by the victim of an illusive strangulation. The mood is dark, deadness and depressing whereas the only music is a canary song, mysterious and silence. The figures and arrangements are in a gender form, the male enter first then their wives follow, the men heading upstairs to investigate the crime scene and the women remain in the kitchen. …show more content…

Few work, or activities were available to women due to the legal institution of coverture. The "History of women in the United States" states that “Under coverture, a woman had no legal identity” (Revolvy) when married and everything she did was under a woman’s father or husband’s authority. This meant that the available occupations for women were limited thus taking care of the children, cleaning the house and taking care of your husband. The essential character in the play Trifles by Susan Glaspell remains unnoticed for the entire piece. This main character is Mrs. Wright whose actions are to be understood, the audience never sees or hears her throughout the piece, and therefore cannot develop an accurate opinion of the outcome of the play. The action of the story takes place after strangulation death of Minnie. In examining the actions of Mrs. Wright, she cannot be verified without closer inspection of Minnie’s personality and experiences. The spousal abuse or pattern of emotional abuse (husband to wife), isolation, the transformation of her life and entrapment. Tradition has it that in marriage the two shall become one and everything that belongs to the man would be for the woman so is his name. R.R.S. Stewart who is a columnist at the Minnesota Daily at the University of Minnesota and the author of “whose last name should have married couple choose?” stated

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