Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Oral Report English 111 Written Report

Powerful Essays
1435 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Oral Report English 111 Written Report
Nikita J. Mattison
Mercy College
English 111
April 22nd, 2015
Female vs. Male Dominance In Susan Glaspell’s, “Trifles” and “A Doll’s House” by Henry Ibsen, we noticed the vast similarity the two stories share. Two different woman make a decision to take matters into their own hands by doing what they want to do, no matter what the outcome may be and in spite of what society thinks. These two women come from different homes and lead very different lives yet, these two women share similar situations- both are victims; both are seeking individuality, and initially, both women end up alone. There are many ways that Nora and Mrs. Wright differ first; both come from completely different households…
A Brief Synopsis of “Trifles”-
The sheriff Henry Peters and the county attorney George Henderson arrive with the witness Lewis Hale, Mrs. Peters, and Mrs. Hale at John Wright’s farmhouse, where the police are investigating Wright's murder. Lewis Hale recounts how he discovered Mrs. Wright acting bizarrely, as she told him that her husband was murdered while she was sleeping. Although a gun had been in the house, Wright was gruesomely strangled with a rope. The men continually disparage the women for worrying about trifles instead of about the case, but Henderson allows the women to collect some items for Mrs. Wright, who is in custody, as long as he agrees that the objects are irrelevant to the case.
While the men are investigating upstairs, Mrs. Hale reminisces about how happy Mrs. Wright had been before her marriage, and she regrets that she had not come to visit Mrs. Wright despite suspecting the unhappiness she had suffered as John Wright's wife. After looking around the room, the women discover a quilt and decide to bring it with them, although the men tease them for pondering about the quilt as they briefly enter the room before going to inspect the barn. Meanwhile, the women discover an empty birdcage and eventually find the dead bird in a box in Mrs. Wright's sewing basket while they are searching for materials for the quilt. The bird has been strangled in the same manner as John Wright. Although Mrs. Peters is hesitant to flout the men, who are only following the law, she and Mrs. Hale decide to hide the evidence, and the men are unable to find any clinching evidence that will prevent her from being acquitted by a future jury - which will, the play implies, most likely prove sympathetic to women.
Brief Synopsis of “ A Doll’s House” –
A Doll’s House traces the awakening of Nora Helmer from her previously unexamined life of domestic, wifely comfort. Having been ruled her whole life by either her father or her husband Torvald, Nora finally comes to question the foundation of everything she has believed in once her marriage is put to the test. Having borrowed money from a man of ill-repute named Krogstad by forging her father’s signature, she was able to pay for a trip to Italy to save her sick husband’s life (he was unaware of the loan, believing that the money came from Nora’s father). Since then, she has had to contrive ways to pay back her loan, growing particularly concerned with money and the ways of a complex world.
When the play opens, it is Christmas Eve, and we find that Torvald has just been promoted to manager of the bank, where he will receive a huge wage and be extremely powerful. Nora is thrilled because she thinks that she will finally be able to pay off the loan and be rid of it. Her happiness, however, is marred when an angry Krogstad approaches her. He has just learned that his position at the bank has been promised to Mrs. Linde, an old school friend of Nora’s who has recently arrived in town in search of work, and he tells Nora that he will reveal her secret if she does not persuade her husband to let him keep his position. Nora tries to convince Torvald to preserve Krogstad’s job, using all of her feminine tricks (which he encourages), but she is unsuccessful. Torvald tells her that Krogstad’s morally corrupt nature is physically repulsive to him and impossible to work with. Nora becomes very worried.
The next day, Nora is nervously moving about the house, afraid that Krogstad will appear at any minute. Being preoccupied reduces her anxiety with the preparations for a big fancy-dress party that will take place the next night in a neighbor’s apartment. When Torvald returns from the bank, she again takes up her pleas on behalf of Krogstad. This time, Torvald not only refuses but also sends off the notice of termination that he has already prepared for Krogstad, reassuring a scared Nora that he will take upon himself any bad things that befall them as a result. Nora is extremely moved by this comment. She begins to consider the possibility of this episode transforming their marriage for the better—as well as the possibility of suicide.

Meanwhile, she converses and flirts with a willing Dr. Rank. Learning that he is rapidly dying, she has an intimate conversation with him that culminates in him professing his love for her just before she is able to ask him for financial help. His words stop her, and she steers the conversation back to safer ground. Their talk is interrupted by the announcement of Krogstad’s presence. Nora asks Dr. Rank to leave and has Krogstad brought in.
Krogstad tells her that he has had a change of heart and that, though he will keep the bond, he will not reveal her to the public. Instead, he wants to give Torvald a note explaining the matter so that Torvald will be pressed to help Krogstad rehabilitate himself and keep his position at the bank. Nora protests against Torvald’s involvement, but Krogstad drops the letter in Torvald’s letterbox anyway, much to Nora’s horror. Nora exclaims aloud that she and Torvald are lost. Still, she tries to use her charms to prevent Torvald from reading the letter, luring him away from business by begging him to help her with the tarantella for the next night’s party. He agrees to put off business until the next day. The letter remains in the letterbox.
The next night, before Torvald and Nora return from the ball, Mrs. Linde and Krogstad, who are old lovers, reunite in the Helmers’ living room. Mrs. Linde asks to take care of Krogstad and his children and to help him become the better man that he knows he is capable of becoming. The Helmers return from the ball as Mrs. Linde is leaving (Krogstad has already left), with Torvald nearly dragging Nora into the room. Alone, Torvald tells Nora how much he desires her but is interrupted by Dr. Rank. The doctor, unbeknownst to Torvald, has come by to say his final farewells, as he covertly explains to Nora. After he leaves, Nora is able to deter Torvald from pursuing her any more by reminding him of the ugliness of death that has just come between them, Nora having revealed Dr. Rank’s secret. Seeing that Torvald finally has collected his letters, she resigns herself to committing suicide.
As she is leaving, though, Torvald stops her. He has just read Krogstad’s letter and is enraged by its contents. He accuses Nora of ruining his life. He essentially tells her that he plans on forsaking her, contrary to his earlier claim that he would take on everything himself. During his tirade, he is interrupted by the maid bearing another note from Krogstad and addressed to Nora. Torvald reads it and becomes overjoyed. Krogstad has had a change of heart and has sent back the bond. Torvald quickly tells Nora that it is all over after all: he has forgiven her, and her pathetic attempt to help him has only made her more endearing than ever.
Nora, seeing Torvald’s true character for the first time, sits her husband down to tell him that she is leaving him. After he protests, she explains that he does not love her—and, after tonight, she does not love him. She tells him that, given the suffocating life she has led until now, she owes it to herself to become fully independent and to explore her own character and the world for herself. As she leaves, she reveals to Torvald that she hopes that a “miracle” might occur: that one day, they might be able to unite in real wedlock. The play ends with the door slamming on her way out.

Cite: www.Plays.about.com www.cliffsnotes.com

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    While Mrs. Wright is helped by her friends to confiscate the weapon she used to kill her husband, Mary is bold enough to cook the frozen leg of lamb she had used to hit her husband at the back of his head. She further invites the Noonan, the police, and his friend “to eat the dinner she had fixed for her husband”. As Peters and Hale are searching for evidence at the Wright’s house, Mrs. Peters supposes that Mrs. Wright “slipped a rope around his neck that choked the life out of him.” The investigators in both stories are certain that the crime was committed by a person from inside the house, but they lacked the necessary information to link the…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Earlier in the day, the county sheriff and his wife, Mrs. Peters stopped by the Hale’s house to pick up Mr. and Mrs. Hale. At the time, Martha was busy sifting flour, but she went along for the ride because she didn’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings. They were visiting Minnie Foster’s house, where Mr.…

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters clearly did not have respect for the law. They both kept the evidence that Mrs. Wright killed her husband a secret. These two women put themselves in Mrs. Wright shoes. They understood why Mrs. Wright killed her husband. They both knew that if their husband had treated them the way Mr. Wright treated Mrs. Wright that they would have probably done the same thing. They also snuck Mrs. Wright things in prison that they were aware she was not suppose to have. “Mrs. Peters is governed by this dogma, until she remembers the silence in her own house after the death of one of her children. This memory produces a powerful bond between her and Minnie 's experience of isolation and loneliness, so powerful, indeed, that Mrs. Peters herself attempts to hide the box with the dead canary in it—fully aware that this action goes against everything society and her husband expect her to do, not only on legal grounds but also because, as a wife, Mrs. Peters is not supposed to act against her husband” (Brown 2011 ). These two women were not close to Mrs.Wright but illegally hid evidence in this case in her favor.…

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    It is mainly oriented in employee’s motivation and happy working environment. So we would like to follow the same strategies with some small amendments, which mean we will include extra motivations like paid tour, free employee’s family visit to Alpine inn & suites without any expenses and the main one is an additional insurance coverage for staff’s family members. According to human resource department we will include a bit new strategy with our customary one that is we will implement a kind of healthy competition among employees. To be more precise each department will be given the profit report of other one and on the basis of that they can improve their performance in a healthy way and of course this would not be a strict to follow motivational strategy it should be up to staff’s discretion. And the new but very effective change in our management plan for entire Alpine group is we will do meetings ones in week which will include all the managers and supervisors from both Dawson Creek and Fort Nelson. For our next working year we like to add two more marketing managers for Fort Nelson branch to concentrate particularly for skiing and paragliding. Our next one is a bit competitive that is we are going to use the weak points of our competitors in Fort Nelson because it’s our new entry over there so in order get rooted in Fort Nelson we must to pop up our exceptional paragliding amenities for more…

    • 2758 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the story, they find several motives for why Mrs. Wright would kill her husband and sympathize the pain she goes through. As they look through Mrs. Wright’s closet to find clothes to give to her in jail, the two women observe how rugged and old her clothes appear, showing that Mr. Wright must not have been financially stable enough to provide her with the items that she desires. This extremely upsets Mrs. Hale, for she had known the unmarried Mrs. Wright, who was widely known to be beautiful, lively, and one of fashion. Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters also examine the kitchen of the house and find everything in a mess and every chore half-finished. While the men degrade her for not fulfilling her duties as a wife, the women support her and exclaim that “farmers’ wives have their hands full” (207). The stove in the poor conditioned kitchen is also used as a metaphor to Mrs. Wright’s relationship with her husband when the two women find it to be broken. The story states that Mrs. Hale thinks “of what it would mean, year after year, to have that stove to wrestle with, and Mrs. Peters replies, “A person gets discouraged—and loses heart” (210). This clearly exemplifies the…

    • 1043 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Milton Levin states “Its picture of women’s isolation in a bleak world is finely drawn.” During the dialogue between Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale, they discuss the loneliness of the Wright house. Mrs. Hale states that she stayed away because it weren’t cheerful. It’s down in a hollow and you don’t see the road. (732) Minnie was isolated from all of society. John Wright would not even consider a telephone. In his opinion, people talked too much. Christine Dymkowski writes, “The separateness of the female and male worlds is thus immediately established visually and then reinforced by the dialogue.” This separation is shown in the text, where the men of the play are often minimizing the women and their responsibilities while patronizing them. Standing in the kitchen, the County Attorney judges Minnie for having a dirty towel. (728) He speaks to the women about it looking for agreement and becomes condescending when he does not have it. He says, “Ah, loyal to your sex, I see.” (728) Then the men proceed to laugh at the fact that the women wondered if Minnie would quilt or knot her pattern.…

    • 683 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The reason I chose the topic to compare and contrast the female leads in Kushner’s Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, Ibsen’s A Doll House, and Williams’ The Glass Menagerie, is because each of the main females in these stories shares a few things in common while also having some things that are not so alike.…

    • 649 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mr. Hale, Mr. Peters, and the county attorney had one objective when going back to the Wright’s house and that was to find concrete evidence to convict Mrs. Wright. When the men discuss on how there was a gun in the house and how [they] “can’t understand” why it was not used (Glaspell 497). The men know without a solid piece of evidence, the jury would most likely dismiss the case due to the there is no evidence to hold Mrs. Wright accountable. Also since the jury would be comprised of mostly if not all men it would seem like a waste of time to the jury to convict without evidence. When leaving the farmhouse Mr. Henderson stresses how they need to find “something to show anger- or sudden feeling” (Glaspell 497). The men in this scene of the story display the conventional attitudes of early nineteenth century males by looking for an obvious reason on how a wife could kill her husband instead of just using a gun. By today’s standards this would seem unheard of due to the increasing innovations of crime scene technology, but during this time period it was all about clear cut…

    • 1356 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    (Glaspell 4) Hesitantly explaining the seeings of the crime scene, Mrs.Hale joins Mrs.Peters, Mr.Peters, Mr.Hale, and Minnie to investigate the crime. The people that Mrs.Hale joined criticizes the Wrights’ home and sees it as dirty and unkempt, but with Mrs.Hale being a farm wife as well, she understands why the house looks the way it does. “There’s a great deal of work to be done on a farm,” says Mrs.Hale defensively. (Glaspell 6) With Mrs.Peters, the sheriff’s wife, not being familiar with Minnie Foster, Martha repeatedly points out how uncheerful the home is. “But i dont think a place would be any the cheerfuller for John Wright’s bein’ in it,” says Mrs.Hale. This quote emphasizes that Martha knows Mr.Wright and recognizes it is impossible for an individual to be happy if living with him. Outside that home people see him as a good man, but personally he is the opposite of well-behaved. As the others observe the house critically, Martha does so sympathetically. Trying to help Mrs.Peters create a connection with Minnie Foster, Mrs.Hale gives a brief description of the young Minnie Foster…

    • 939 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Wright, formerly Minnie Foster, used to sing before she married. After her marriage, she got a bird that sings. Mr. Wright, having already “killed” one form of singing, proceeds to do so with yet another form, the bird (paragraph 244). The bird is a reflection of Mrs. Wright’s pre-marriage personality, and when killed, it is essentially killing Minnie Foster again. The two women become sympathetic toward Mrs. Wright, backing up the desire to withhold the evidence of the dead bird. Meanwhile, the men are searching for evidence of motive, in order to convict Mrs. Wright. While the women are gathering belongings to take to Mrs. Wright, they discover an unfinished quilt that has some stitching that is out of place; Mrs. Hale decides that it would make Mrs. Wright happy if she fixed the stitching for her. The women also discover that Mr. Wright was murdered in the same fashion that the bird was killed. Mrs. Petersrecalls when her kitten was killed right in front of her, and remembers that she had wanted to “hurt” the person responsible, however, she was being held back. At that, she understands the emotions controlling Mrs. Wright and becomes more sympathetic to…

    • 728 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A Jury of Her Peers

    • 334 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “A Jury of Her Peers” chronicles the discovery of and subsequent investigation into John Wright’s murder. The story begins on a cold windy day in Dickson County with Martha Hale, being abruptly called to ride to a crime scene with Lewis Hale, her husband; Sheriff Peters, the county sheriff; and Mrs. Peters, the sheriff’s wife. She rushes out to join them in the buggy and the group sets off. They arrive at the scene of the crime, the Wright’s lonesome-looking house. Immediately Mrs. Hale exhibits feeling of guilt for not visiting her friend Minnie Foster since Foster had married and become Mrs. Wright (the dead man's wife) twenty years prior. Once the whole group is safely inside the house, Mr. Hale is asked to describe, to the county attorney, George Henderson, what he had seen and experienced the day prior. Despite the serious circumstances, he delivers his story in a long-winded and poorly thought-out manner, tendencies he struggles to avoid throughout. The story begins with Mr. Hale venturing to Mr. Wright’s house to convince Wright to get a telephone. Upon entering the house he finds Mrs. Wright in a delirious state and comes to learn that Mr. Wright has allegedly been strangled. The women's curious nature and very peculiar attention to minute details allow them to find evidence of Mrs. Wright's guilt and of her provocations and motives, while the men are unable to procure any evidence. The women find the one usable piece of evidence: the dead bird in the box. It's stated that Minnie used to love to sing and her husband took that away from her. But now finding her bird is dead, it is evident Mrs. Wright killed her husband. The women, finding justification in Mrs. Wright’s actions, go about hiding what they find from the men. In the end, their obstruction of evidence will seemingly prevent a conviction. The story ends here, and does not move into the occurrences after they leave the…

    • 334 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Wright’s abusive behavior. When she married, Mrs. Wright led a quiet life as a Farmers’ wife and had no children. On the other hand, Mrs. Hale recounts Mrs. Wright as “Minnie Foster when she wore a white dress with blue ribbons and stood up there in the choir and sang” (1394). The only joy and companionship Mrs. Wright experienced were that of her pet bird. As the women collected Mrs. Wright’s sewing things, they stumbled across a box with her dead bird wrapped in a silk cloth. After looking at each other in horror, Mrs. Peters confirms “Somebody-wrung-its-neck.” (1393). Before Minnie Foster became Mrs. Wright, her life was vibrant and full of life, now the only joy she possessed was killed by her husband and Mrs. Hale insists, “She used to sing. He killed that, too.” (1393). Though Mr. Wright appears to be an upstanding citizen, his heartless killing of Mrs. Wright’s bird intensified her reasoning’s for murdering…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, portrays a young married woman, Nora, who plays a dramatic role of deception and self-indulgence. The author creates a good understanding of a woman’s role by assuming Nora is an average housewife who does not work; her only job is to maintain the house and raise the children like a stereotypical woman that cannot work or help society. In reality, she is not an average housewife in that she has a hired maid who deals with the house and children. Although Ibsen focuses on these “housewife” attributes, Nora’s character is ambitious, naive, and somewhat cunning. She hides a dark secret from her husband that not only includes borrowing money, but also forgery. Nora’s choices were irrational; she handled the situations very poorly in this play by keeping everything a secret. The way that women were viewed in this time period created a barrier that she could not overcome. The decisions that had the potential to be good were otherwise molded into appalling ones. Women should have just as many rights as men and should not be discriminated by gender; but they should also accept consequences in the same way without a lesser or harsher punishment.…

    • 3445 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mrs. Hale remembers Mrs. Wright as a girl; Minnie Foster. Mrs. Hale described the young girls, as "kind of like a bird herself – real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and – fluttery." (Glaspell) If you notice, even the name Minnie belittles her. There are several indicators that Mr. Wright is abusive to his wife, but the people of their town see John Wright as a "good man." (Glaspell) Mrs.…

    • 1700 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    english report

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Assalamualaikum and very good evening to our lecturer and to all my fellow friends. Today I want to talk about one issue tht I chose according to the traffic problem at parit raja. Based on my information tht I got from my friends and my family, I heared tht along time a go there are a lot of accident occurred along the road starting from ayer itam until batu pahat…accident between car n car, motorcycle n motorcycle, car n superbike and almost tragic is between motor n lorry. Sometimes fatal accident was occurred along the road.…

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics