Topic > A Doll's House, Nonsense and Domestic Dependence - 1995

Looking over time, women have overcome certain periods of abuse and intrusion into society to be heard and noticed as equals to humanity. Women have fought for equal rights as early as the 1800s, when in this period the role of the woman was reserved in every home, to be seen but not heard, to complete what were daily chores such as cleaning, cooking, sewing and motherhood, . Women were in a time warp and needed to speak up, to be listened to and not judged by their mother's nudity and homemaking skills. Women were forced to communicate with each other in society, and also forced to discuss their political opinions with each other. In the comedy "Trifles", he characterizes women in situations as judged by men by examining them for their domestic economic engineering (multi-tasking in the home) skills, he is never acknowledged, but simply ridiculed to the breaking point of incompetence . In the play “A Doll House” the woman is given the image of codependency, not being able to survive without her husband's allowances to run the house and take care of the children's needs, thus giving the wife a tool to manipulate the husband, this has formed a habit of deception because she didn't feel she could be honest with the man who should love her unconditionally, but instead he treats her like a child and degrades her with name calling. These plays describe man's role as law and woman's role to control, and the strength that allows these women to resist and break away from "a modern tragedy" of mental, emotional, and physical abuse (Ibsen, 1165). depicts characters to give the audience a visual identity on something recognizable from life. Glaspell's work Trifles gives precisely this image to the public. Since character... in the center of the card... is equal to man, she set the idea in motion and gave women the courage and determination to form organized groups to gain their freedom and be heard in society . Women banded together to start a growth that became a well-known organization called the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869, and that was just the beginning. In 1921, women were noticed in society and gained civil rights, women could now vote, and it didn't stop there. Women fought for better careers, better pay, and, above all, better recognition of their role in American society. Today, women go so far as to sit in the Senate and take on roles in companies as CEOs. Women today are a great social force in our society, it is a growing force with real results and women today thank the struggles of our predecessors who set an example for today's female population.