'How does Mrs Wright respond to the questions about the murder?' from Trifles by Susan Glaspell
Answers
Explanation:
The kitchen is in a disarray as the attorney, the Peters, and the Hales come in after the murder. The room is "gloomy," with the bread left out of the breadbox, dirty pans left under the sink,...
Answer:
In most fictional mystery novels and plays, the plot is androcentric and features an actively analytical male hero who discovers the identity of the murder by searching for evidence and reasons his way through the crime. Sherlock Holmes, for example, is generally dispassionate in his pursuit of murderers as he continually bests the police at their own jobs. Like Holmes, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale act as amateur detectives who circumvent the folly of official law enforcement, in the form of the sheriff and the county attorney. Unlike typical male crime solvers, however, the women of Trifles avoid the ruthless search for information that also characterizes Henderson and instead achieve their solution by the seemingly accidental observation of Minnie Wright's kitchen while simultaneously developing a desire to protect rather than condemn the perpetrator.