Monday, March 26, 2012

Reflection on "Trifles" by Susan Glaspell

Susan Glaspell's "Trifles" 
Written in 1916, Susan Glaspell’s one-act play Trifles is loosely based on true events. As a young reporter, Glaspell covered a murder case in a small town in Iowa. Years later, she crafted a short play inspired by her experiences and observations.
The Sheriff and the County attorney investigate the house of Mr. Wright after his murder. The men are convinced that Mrs. Wright killed her husband, but haven't found no evidence.
As the two question the man who discovers the dead body, Mr. Hale, they make fun at the women and their "trifles". When the men search all the house to look for evidence, their wives examine the kitchen where they find clues pointing to Mrs. Wright's guilt. In other areas of the house, the women discover more clues, clues that the men overlook as mere "trifles". The condescending attitude of the investigators toward their wives make them feel unimportant and causes them to withhold the evidence.
The central theme of the play is that men don't appreciate women, this is why the wives hide the dead bird, as an act of loyalty to their gender and compassion to Mrs. Wright. The men within this play betray a sense of self-importance. They present themselves as tough, serious-minded detectives, when in truth they are not nearly as observant as the female characters. Their pompous attitude causes the women to feel defensive and form ranks. Not only do Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters bond, but they choose to hide evidence as an act of compassion for Mrs. Wright. Stealing the box with the dead bird is an act of loyalty to their gender and an act of defiance against a callous patriarchal society. 
 Domestic Abuse is reflected, at the heart of Mrs. Wright's loneliness lay the abusive Mr. Wright, whose tyrannical behavior causes his wife to murder him.
It was a good play, it really makes you think what women are capable of doing and how men don't realize it nor appreciates them.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

My Sister's Way

In William Carlos William's short story, a doctor uses force to diagnose a girl that doesn't cooperate. In real life this types of situation really does happen. I can tell an incident that might relate to this story. When I was a child my sister was determined to make me clean the house, do chores and do my homework. I didn't want to, I never did what she said even though she was bigger than me and had authority over me. I even mocked her and made her feel inferior to me. One day, she got furious and I had homework to do. As always, I didn't want to do anything, and my sister was loosing her patience. When I told her I wasn't going to do the homework, she hit me with my book and made me read it out loud. She forced me to write out the assignment and do everything right. Now I thank her because she taught me the importance of study and being responsible. The incident helped me get where I stand now and stand proudly.
“Sisters, as you know, also have a unique relationship. This is the person who has known you your entire life, who should love you and stand by you no matter what, and yet it's your sister who knows exactly where to drive the knife to hurt you the most.”
Lisa See

Sunday, February 5, 2012

The Use of Force


"The Use of Force" by William Carlos William was an appealing story for me, it really has truth in it. The story tells us how people with authority use verbal and even sometimes physical force to control others without authority. In this case, a doctor is determined to find out an illness of a girl that is beautiful but fully ignorant and stubborn. The girl's attitude of not letting him do his job irritates him to the point he gets furious and starts to use physical force to open up her mouth so he could look at her throat and finally diagnose her sickness. Even though the doctor was angry and had pleasure attacking her, he was really worried about her health, but using physical force wasn't the right way to help her. The truth is, I think authority can't use force to make people do what they want. But as the author implies: "It is a social necessity" that when people are threat to authority or even to others, the use of force may be a last resolution.
Sometimes people are ignorant and don't reason. Like the child in the story, even though she knows she has a contagious illness that could kill her and affect others, she doesn't let the doctor, which has authority, diagnose nor help her. 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Journal's Description

Yesterday, in class we were to describe how the images or the art we did to the journal described our personality.
My journal mostly has images of high fashion because my life is all about the industry of fashion. Since I began in the industry, I realized that marketing was my future. There are runway models that represent my love to what I do best, the runway. The baby represents the importance I give to family and my desire to have a great one in the future. There is an extraordinary shoe because I am totally obsessed with shoes, especially the weird ones. The nail polish characterizes the compulsion of painting my nails. The eyes are because I do a lot of expressions with my eyes. The word LIFE represents the way I see living: "Live like its your last day everyday." For last the most important element, the word AMOR upside down, it represents the importance of falling in love and how this feeling turns your life upside down.