Monday, September 14, 2009

“A Jury of her Peers”

The short story "A Jury of her Peers" by Susan Glaspell is a very interseting piece of literature filled with many symbols and shows a direct portrayal of what life was like in the time period that the story takes place. The main point of the story is to show how something so cheerful and wonderful can turn to something so ugly and crazy when it is caged up with nowhere to go, no one to see, and nothing to do. When all those freedoms get taken away from you as they did from Minnie Foster people get very unhappy as those people need to get out of the mental and physical cage that they have been put in. The last straw in this story for Minnie Foster was when her canary was strangled to death. That canary was a symbol of her little bit of freedom that she had left and when that was gone with it went all hope, as well as her last glimmer of freedom in that cage of a home that she was living in. So with that she went and strangled the life out of that person who had strangled everything out of her. That person was her husband Mr. Wright. In the end this story shows how people need to be let out to have their own life, one not controlled by another person and not to be stuck in their house sitting in misery.

4 comments:

  1. I like the sentence about her strangling the life out of the person who strangled everything out of her. In your thesis you said something showing how life was like in that time period and I didn't see much of that.

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  2. I like how you use a metaphor of how she was trapped in a cage and was trapped mentally and physically.

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  3. I like how you symbolize that the canary was all the hope she had left in the world, and when it got killed, she had no hope left and she finally snapped.

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  4. I liked the part when you said "The main point of this story is to show how something so cheerful and wonderful into something so crazy and ugly when it is locked up with nowhere to go, no one to see, and nothing to see." Next time maybe watch your sentence lengths, but otherwise it's a great piece.

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