what attitudes toward woman the sheriff and the county attorney express? The Sheriff and County Attorney looked down on the women and belittled them at every opportunity. As for the women, they didn't cater to the men or their demeaning behavior; they had a comeback for every comment.
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Why does the County Attorney care so much about discovering a motive for the killing ? -Not only is it because is his job to find the reason to the murder and understand what happen so he can present it in court to a…show more content…
Hale grabs the makeshift canary coffin and puts it in the pocket of her big coat. The County Attorney and the Sheriff reenter, and the Attorney facetiously says that at least the women figured out that Mrs. Wright wasn't going to quilt the quilt.
Wright (Minnie Foster) has killed her husband but that she was justified in doing so. They conceal the evidence to prevent Mrs. Wright's possible conviction.
The two female characters, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale are able to sympathize with Mrs. Wright and understand her possible motive leading them to hide the evidence against her.
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.
Wright. What does the Sherriff ask the women to bring Mrs. Wright in jail? Clothes.
Hale discover the dead canary in Mrs. Wright's sewing basket, they realize that her murder of her husband did not result solely from her unhappiness in her marriage but from an enforced return to solitude by the killing of her pet bird.
In “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell Minnie Foster was found sitting in her chair knitting while the investigator found her husband strangled to death in their bed.
He merely wanted a story to present to the jurors on why Mrs. Wright killed her husband. He felt that the jurors would not convict a woman if there is no evidence or a motive presented.
They were belittling towards the women by making a comment on a conversation the women were having about fruit. They commented that women always worry over non-significant things. The women just accepted the comments as if it is something they are used to.
When Oedipus and Jocasta begin to get close to the truth about Laius's murder, in Oedipus the King, Oedipus fastens onto a detail in the hope of exonerating himself. Jocasta says that she was told that Laius was killed by "strangers," whereas Oedipus knows that he acted alone when he killed a man in similar circumstances. This is an extraordinary moment because it calls into question the entire truth-seeking process Oedipus believes himself to be undertaking. Both Oedipus and Jocasta act as though the servant's story, once spoken, is irrefutable history. Neither can face the possibility of what it would mean if the servant were wrong. This is perhaps why Jocasta feels she can tell Oedipus of the prophecy that her son would kill his father, and Oedipus can tell her about the similar prophecy given him by an oracle, and neither feels compelled to remark on the coincidence; or why Oedipus can hear the story of Jocasta binding her child's ankles and not think of his own swollen feet. While the information in these speeches is largely intended to make the audience painfully aware of the tragic irony, it also emphasizes just how desperately Oedipus and Jocasta do not want to speak the obvious truth: they look at the circumstances and details of everyday life and pretend not to see them.
In drama, a speech by a character alone onstage in which he or she utters his or her thoughts aloud.
A literary work aimed at amusing an audience. In a traditional play with this theme, the protagonist often faces obstacles and complications that threaten disaster but are overturned at the last minute to produce a happy ending.