ipl-logo

A Jury Of Her Peers Essay

1335 Words6 Pages

Breanna Wainwright John Stevens
Engl Comp 2 1302
04/10/2023
Jury of Her’s : Early Feminism Susan Glaspell, a dramatist, writer, and journalist from the United States, was born on July 1, 1876, in Davenport, Iowa. She attended Drake University, also located in Des Moines, and later went on to work for the Des Moines Daily News as a reporter. She became a member of the Provincetown Players, an avant-garde theater company, in 1913. The short story "A Jury of Her Peers," written by Glaspell and first published in 1917, is one of her most well-known works. This fictional account is based on a true murder case that Glaspell investigated for the Des Moines Daily News (Glaspell 379). Margaret Hossack, the defendant in this case, was accused of killing …show more content…

Glaspell uses symbols to bring attention to and expose the oppression of women in a patriarchal culture. One of the story's most memorable symbols is a canary that has died. The canary's death reflects the silencing of women's voices in a patriarchal society, as the bird symbolises female oppression (SERTEL 1007). The women understand that Minnie's only source of happiness and friendship during her suffocating marriage is the dead bird they find in her sewing basket. The canary's demise is also symbolic of the oppression and marginalization of women in patriarchal societies. Glaspell uses the metaphor of the dead canary to stress the importance of listening to and learning from women's …show more content…

"Susan Glaspell's Trifles and A Jury of Her Peers: Woman abuse in a literary and legal context." Buff. L. Rev. 45 (1997): 779.
Ayan, Meryem. "Genderlect investigation in susan glaspell's a jury of her peers." European Scientific Journal (2016).
Bryan, Patricia L. "Stories in Fiction and in Fact: Susan Glaspell's" A Jury of Her Peers" and the 1901 Murder Trial of Margaret Hossack." Stanford Law Review (1997): 1293- 1363.
Forell, Caroline. "Using A Jury of Her Peers to Teach About the Connection Between Domestic Violence and Animal Abuse." Animal L. 15 (2008): 53.
Glaspell, Susan. "A jury of her peers." Images of Women in Literature (1917): 370-85.
Glaspell, Susan. Her America:“A Jury of Her Peers” and Other Stories. University of Iowa Press, 2010.
SERTEL, Yasemin Güniz. "From the Play to the Story: Writers and Readers of A Jury of Her Peers." RumeliDE Dil ve Edebiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi 26: 1004-1013.
Stormer, Nathan. "To remember, to act, to forget: Tracing collective remembrance through “A jury of her peers”." Communication Studies 54.4 (2003): 510-529.
Wright, Janet Stobbs. "Law, justice, and female revenge in" Kerfol", by Edith Wharton, and" Trifles" and" A Jury of her Peers", by Susan Glaspell." Atlantis (2002):

Open Document