"Trifles," a play written by Susan Glaspell, is a cleverly written story about a murder and more importantly, it effectively describes the treatment of women during the early 1900s. Throughout the play, Glaspell used dialogue, which allowed us to see the demeaning view the men had for the women during the setting of the play. The men use the guns, windows and evidence in an attempt to solve the murder mystery, and women use their sewing and fruits. The women in the play end up understanding the motives of the murder and prove the men wrong for calling their worries "trifles."
Victorian women had very restricted lifestyles. Most women never worked outside of their home unless they were teachers or domestic servants. They were limited to taking care of their households and sexually pleasing their husbands. Kate Chopin's "The Storm", for example, is a story of infidelity of a woman to her husband. She shares a very passionate love affair with another man and is permanently changed by her discovery of sexual nature.
At the time when Chopin wrote "The Storm", sex was viewed as a chore to a woman, such as washing the dishes or scrubbing floors. Calixta's character in the