Trifles" and "Fences"

While both "Fences" by August Wilson and "Trifles" by Susan Glaspell depict the stresses and strains upon a group of people who are marginalized by mainstream society, the dramas deploy different narrative techniques to do so. "Trifles" describes the difficulties women face in male-dominated society on stage, while "Fences" makes its African-American characters the center of the dialogue and staging, and white influence occurs in the margins, off-stage and between acts.

Although men talk through much of the short play's "Trifles'" duration, female utterances gain significance when they are made because of their pointed nature in contrast to male verbosity. Over the course of the play, the women of the play examine the accused protagonist's home and collect her things for her stay in prison. The drama of "Trifles" is created by the contrast created between mainstream, male society's expressed views, through the representative voices of the...
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