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	Today's Woman Vs. Yesterday's

	Women of today have come a long way since the periods portrayed in the dramas "Trifles," 
written by Susan Glaspell, and "Doll House," written by Henrik Ibsen.  In both dramas, the characters 
played by women were portrayed as nothing more than property which should be seen and not heard.  This 
is typical of society in the late 1800's and early 1900's, which is the time setting in which these dramas take 
place.
	In the drama "Trifles," the male characters known as Henry Peters (sheriff) and George Henderson 
(county attorney) strut around like roosters making lewd, sexist remarks while investigating the murder of 
farmer John Wright.  The two farm women, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters, while forced to listen to such 
barbaric comments, actually end up solving the murder.  Throughout the drama, the male characters are 
made to walk around the farm house looking for clues.  Unfortunately, they do this from a male's point of 
view and are completely oblivious to the unseen environment around them.
	During this time, the two ladies sit silently conversing between themselves about the tragedy, and 
actually find clues to the hows and whys of the suspect without really looking.  The female characters in 
this drama are written to be very perceptive and understanding about what happens in everyday life in a 
country home, since they too are country homemakers.  With this information, which the men do not share, 
they notice small insignificant looking items which appear to be out of place.  Through deductive 
reasoning, the women were able to figure out that John Wright's wife had been abused for many years.  Not 
physical abuse, but severe mental abuse.  The abuse seemed to reach its zenith when her husband killed her 
canary by ringing the bird's neck.  This signifies a symbol of the life and freedom she once had.
	In the drama "Doll House," the main character named Nora is a woman who has gone through life 
being treated as if she were a "china doll."  She was not unlike a china doll to be placed high on a pedestal, 
never to be heard from except when spoken to, or when asked to entertain her husband Torvald, their 
children or a group of Torvald's friends.
	As the story progresses, Ibsen creates a climax in the theme when Torvald finds out that Nora 
forged her father's name on a document to obtain money for a trip to Italy.  This trip to Italy was necessary 
in order to save his life.  Society had a certain stigmatism about the women of the late 1800's.  Women 
were not thought to have been as smart as men, and were therefore not expected to understand the 
complicated world of money and especially the repercussions of getting a loan from places other than a 
banking institution.  At this point, Nora receives a miracle she has not been looking forward to.  The 
miracle turned out to be a test in which she finds out that their storybook love is not as strong to Torvald as 
she had imagined and hoped for.  This particular scene in the drama gave the impression of morning sun 
rays tapping on the petals on a morning glory. With this, the reader begins to witness the blossoming of a 
flower.  Nora's eyes open for what appears to be the firs!
t time in her life, and she makes the decision to leave her life and family in search for a new beginning.
	For a male author born and raised in the 1800's, Ibsen does a fine job of looking at a relationship 
of this kind from a woman's point of view.
	However, women of today would not put up with either one of these situations.  The women of 
today are more assertive and demanding than they used to be.  There are many women today who are just 
as good if not better than their male counterparts.  Some of the most successful people in today's society are 
women.  With the passage of the right for women to vote and the women's movement of the late sixties and 
early seventies, women have deservingly "Come a Long Way Baby."




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