Friday, January 31, 2014

"Trifles" by Susan Glaspell

           After reading the play Trifles I couldn't help but compare it to Overtones. Although the subject matter seems completely different (a murder in a small town vs. a tea party between two old acquaintances) they both focus on the inner workings of a woman's mind. The characters of Mrs. and Mr. Wright are used as plot points to display the main differences between men and women. On several occasions during the play the characters make considerable effort to defend their sex and justify their roles. For example, when the county attorney sees that the towels are dirty in the kitchen, he asserts,"[Mrs. Wright]…not much of a housekeeper..." to which Mrs. Hale fires back,"There's a great deal of work to be done on a farm…Men's hands aren't always as clean as they might be." This indicates an attempt by Mrs. Hale to shift the power from men to women. It's her not so subtle way of letting him know that the men are causing the problems that the women then have to fix.

Oh Haaale NO!            

           Mrs. Hale is the character fighting to be heard, while Mrs. Peters is more reserved. What strikes me as interesting about these characters is they are never given first names. One reason for this could be that it's an illustration of these women "belonging" to the men they are married to. In that case, it reinforces the feeling Mrs. Wright had about being trapped as merely an extension of this man with no way of making a happy, "cheerful" life for herself. A different reason could be that these two women are the two sides of Mrs. Wright. You may think of Mrs. Peters as the side that was on the surface, very agreeable, stands behind her husband and doesn't make trouble. On the other hand Mrs. Hale is what is bubbling below the surface. The side that takes exception at being condescended to and desperately craves equality and respect.

         "quilt it or knot it"

They keep bringing it up almost as a little joke, so it must mean something. What is the significance? When looking into knitting you find that to "quilt" takes a lot of effort but makes the quilt incredibly durable. One piece should be completed by multiple people at once, while "knotting" is a much quicker method that can be done on your own. The obvious correlation of the "knot" would be that Mr. Wright was killed by a knot around the neck. But if you look deeper, you see that if she were going to "knot it" as the ladies implied she would, it again speaks to her intense isolation from the world. Finishing the quilt by herself, because she has no circle of friends to help her.

1 comment:

  1. I love your "Oh Halllle no"- very clever. I also noticed that the women weren't given names. I agree that it was a possible choice for Glaspell to not give the women names as a way of belonging to their husbands. I really like idea of Mrs. Wright feeling so "trapped" (after we already established the women in the play belong to their husband) she felt the only way to escape from his was if he was dead. And also by knotting it- she ended it.

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