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According to Glaspell (971), all through the course of the play, men can be seen to move on and off the stage searching for clues also as a rationale for this monstrous crime. Men spend little time in the kitchen symbolizing that a kitchen is a woman domain. This clearly indicate that the play is more of a commentary regarding women oppression, confining nature displayed in various rigid stereotypes and finally, differences in perspective between men and women. Further, the fact that men bound by concrete stereotypes as well as their inability to fit inside Minnie shoes is a symbol of a male dominated society.
According to Glaspell (971), In this case men are supposed to be key investigator towards Wright’s death misses all clues and without knowledge their wives are outwitting them. This is used to symbolize that women just like their male counterparts can be of help in matter regarding the society. Throughout the story, men never at any given time acknowledge Minnie oppression and how it made her act desperately. This clearly symbolizes the wives being weaker sex compared to their male counterparts (Glaspell, 985).
Glaspell (985) maintains that, the kitchen in this play displays many signs of Minnie Wright life of violence as well as abuse. These signs are normally seen by women as opposed to their male counterparts who constantly ignore them. Written at the time when women were not allowed to sit on the jury’s desk, the story is seen to raise many important issues about various gendered aspect of unforeseen event laws, justice as well as construction of psychiatric diagnoses especially in incidences of insanity in crime zones.
The door of the bird cage was damaged giving that indication of both violence and tremendous anger of an explosive nature displayed by men. The cage with the imprisoned bird symbolizes Minnie Wright imprisonment in her abusive marriage as well as her isolated home (represented as a cage). This can also be related to the fact that; historically, women have been analogized to birds enclosed in a cage so that they can be viewed as pretty objects and the concern they hold is of no significance. Glaspell (678) maintains that, based on the aspect of symbolism, the author has used symbolism to develop a great idea regarding the misunderstanding which exists between men and women.
Minnie (John Wright wife) notes that she used to sing before she was married to John Wright. After her marriage, Wright prevented her from singing as well as doing anything that will greatly make her pleasure grow. According to Glaspell (684), the dilemma of Minnie is highly represented as spiritual death symbolized in the strangling of her songbird companion. Further, Minnie is greatly embodied in her sewing tools and kitchen. The weather is cold and due to freezing her preserve jars breaks highly symbolizing the cold atmosphere in her home that in turn breaks her inmost spirit.
The cold weather also symbolizes the fall of human empathy between John Wright and Minnie (Belasco, 782). It is quite evident the Minnie bare kitchen can be used to symbolize the lives of former inhabitants of this same house. Focusing on male, their character reflects the symbol of cold rationality as well as that of law maker. Women greatly demonstrate an intuitiveness delegate of the psychoanalytic movement, evoking an examination of the significance of
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