Trifles: A Gender Play
Susan Glaspell's Trifles explores the classical male stereotype of women by declaring that women frequently worry about matters of little, or no importance. This stereotype makes the assumption that only males are concerned with important issues, issues that females would never discuss or confront. The characters spend the entirety of the play searching for clues to solve a murder case. Ironically, the female characters, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale, uncover crucial evidence and solve the murder case, not the male characters. The men in the play, the Sheriff, County Attorney, and Hale, search the scene of the crime for evidence on their own, and mock the women's discussions. The women's interest in the quilt, broken bird cage door, and dead canary, all of which are assumed to be unimportant or trifling objects, is what consequentially leads to their solving of the crime. The women are able to discover who the killer is by paying attention to detail, and prove that the items which the men consider insignificant are important after all. At the start of the play, all of the characters enter the abandoned farmhouse of John Wright, who was recently hanged by an unknown killer. The Sheriff and County Att
Wright so uneasy that she would start sewing carelessly. Glaspell's Trifles shows how women reveal basic truths about life by paying close attention to detail, and shows the true importance of the things which men generally find to be trivial. They believe that they possess superior intelligence and knowledge of the world in comparison to women, but cannot find enough evidence to convict Mrs. Hale then explains how lonesome Mrs. Wright to discover the dead bird, to find that the one thing that was providing her company and happiness in the house was killed. " This is when the women decide that they will stick together, and keep their knowledge of the murder to themselves. Wright, as they simply cannot relate to her as a female. orney start scanning the house for clues as to who killed Mr. Wright into an unhappy woman, and goes on to say that he was also the person who killed the bird: "No, Wright wouldn't like the bird-a thing that sang. Hale then affirms her earlier belief that Mr.
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