Susan Glaspell, A jury of her peers (#Review)

One of my retirement activities is to co-ordinate a little band of volunteer indexers at the National Film and Sound Archive. Not only do we do useful work for the Archive, but we get to socialise a little with our peers, meaning we talk about what we are watching, listening to, and reading. Recently, one of the team sent me a short story to read. He “raved” about it, he wrote in the accompanying email. Well, I have now read it and I’m mighty impressed too. It’s by an American writer and appeared in one of the those annual best short stories volumes, this one for 1917.

Susan Glaspell

The author of the story, as you will have worked out from the post title, is Susan Glaspell (1876-1948). I had never heard of her, but fortunately she has a decent-sized Wikipedia page which you can read, but I’ll give a brief summary here. She was a playwright, novelist, journalist and actress. Indeed, she and her husband founded America’s first modern theatre company, the Provincetown Players. Wikipedia then says, and I’ll quote because why try to paraphrase it:

First known for her short stories (fifty were published), Glaspell also wrote nine novels, fifteen plays, and a biography. Often set in her native Midwest, these semi-autobiographical tales typically explore contemporary social issues, such as gender, ethics, and dissent, while featuring deep, sympathetic characters who make principled stands. Her 1930 play Alison’s House earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Wikipedia has much more to say but essentially, like many women writers, her star faded, partly Wikipedia says, because her “strong and independent female protagonists were less popular in the post-war era, which stressed female domesticity”. However, from the 1970s on – we all know about this revival don’t we – she started to regain traction. Now, she is recognised as a “pioneering feminist writer and America’s first important modern female playwright”.

All this might clue you in to why I so enjoyed her story.

“A jury of her peers”

Kindle ed.

“A jury of her peers” is quite a long short story, but it engrosses from the beginning because of how Glaspell slowly unfolds the story, incisively developing, as she goes, a number of ideas that still speak to us today. We readers work out fairly quickly what has likely gone on, but our fascination lies in how the two women protagonists come to their understanding of the matter, how they try to resist what they have intuitively guessed, and what they decide to do about it. Overlaying this are the assumptions made about them (and about women in general) by the men involved, which adds a social dimension to the moral one. It’s a wonderfully complex story. It’s no accident that the main action takes place in that women’s domain, the humble kitchen.

The story, according to Wikipedia again, was loosely based on the 1900 murder of a man called John Hossack which Glaspell covered while working as a journalist. She originally wrote it in 1916 as a one-act play, Trifles, for the Provincetown Players, before turning it into a short story. Later, it was adapted for an episode of that 1950s TV series, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and into a 30-minute film by Sally Heckel in 1980.

The plot is simple. A farmer, John Wright, has been murdered, and his wife, the diminutively named Minnie, taken into custody, the day before the story’s action takes place. The story opens with Sheriff Peters and the county attorney Mr Henderson picking up the Wrights’ neighbour, farmer Mr Hale, who had called in the death the day before. Their aim is to visit the scene to look for evidence that might explain what had happened, that might provide a motive. In the buggy is the sheriff’s wife Mrs Peters who is coming along to collect some clothes for Minnie. At the last minute, Mrs Hale is asked to join them, at the request of Mrs Peters who appears to need some support in her sad task.

So, this band of five arrive at the Wrights’ “lonesome-looking place” and, while the men go in search of their evidence, the women remain in the kitchen-living area to get those items Minnie had asked for. As they do, they start to notice things around them – providing insight into Minnie’s life and state of mind – and slowly they piece together an understanding of what had happened. These two women don’t know each other well, so they are cautious with each other, sometimes moving “closer together” in solidarity, particularly when the men appear at intervals and invariably belittle women’s skills and knowledge, but other times drawing apart, uncertainly feeling each other out as they simultaneously feel out their own thoughts and feelings.

The practical farmer’s wife Mrs Hale increasingly senses what sort of life Minnie had led, and feels guilty, criminal even, about never having visited her, but she is uncertain about how the timid-seeming, law-abiding Sheriff’s wife is reacting. However, every now and then she catches in Mrs Peters “a look of seeing into things, of seeing through a thing to something else”. Eventually, they connect, “in a steady burning look in which there was no evasion, no flinching”.

It is so beautifully done, with barely a wasted word or description, with every interaction carrying weight, with perfect use of metaphor (involving birds, cages, and knots) and irony. It reminded me, just a little, of Pat Barker’s The women of Troy (my review), another story in which men underestimate women, to their detriment (though they may not always know it). And so, in this story, a number of issues are explored, including morality and natural justice versus the law; gender and men’s superior, condescending dismissal of women’s skills and knowledge; neighbourliness and guilt; and female solidarity.

“A jury of her peers” is a subversive crime story, one that wowed me, for its subject matter, particularly given the time it was written, and for its sure, unflinching writing. I’m impressed that it was chosen for an annual best anthology by a man – but perhaps that’s me being condescending now. Whatever! I would love to read more Glaspell.

Susan Glaspell
“A jury of her peers” (orig. pub. in Every Week, 5 March 1917)
in Edward J. O’Brien (ed.), The best short stories of 1917 and The yearbook of the American short story
Boston: Small, Maynard and Company, 2014
pp. 256-282
Available online at Hathitrust

22 thoughts on “Susan Glaspell, A jury of her peers (#Review)

  1. No wonder she writes impressively, ST – the Pulitzer Prize !!
    No wonder she won the Pulitzer Prize, ST – it’s clear she can really write !!

    • And, MR, if you go to the Wikipedia link for the story, you’ll find it in audio on LibriVox. I know LibriVox is mixed but this is a crime story and in audio so up your alley. (Don’t read the page though because, being an encyclopaedia, they describe the plot.)

      • Ho ! – if that ain’t helpful, I dunno what is. 😀
        I shall do that post thawed frozen blueberried with Woolworths Greek-style yogurt ..
        Thank-you muchly, ST !!

  2. Sounds wonderful, WG!  Is her work available?  Or did I miss something?  (Just back from pre-poll duty for YES and feeling every bit my about-to-be 85.)

    • Good for you Sara. I hope voters treated you well.

      I think you’d really like this story. There’s a link right at the end of the post for an online version. You can also get it on the Kindle (and maybe other ebook readers?) for free or just a dollar or two. Let me know what you think if you read it. I can’t imagine you won’t appreciate it!

      • Yes, I read it and agree with your enthusiasm.  There’s always been a powerful crypto-feminism in between the times when it just plain erupts. 

        • Oh so glad you read it Sara. You are absolutely right, and it’s something that not everyone realises when they read such ideas, say, in historical fiction. It’s like they think these ideas popped suddenly out of nowhere. It is so exciting when you find these currents expressed so clearly but in the language and spirit of the time. These women have to rely on their own thinking and feeling about what might be fair and reasonable.

  3. She landed on my TBR via my Virago-obsession and I’m always pleased to hear more about her and her work. The intro, which she contributed herself, to my little college-booksale copy of Barren Ground, talks of how she was concerned not only with human figures but also a “universal rhythm deeper and more fluid than any material texture.” She continues: “Beneath the lights and shadows there is the brooding spirit of place, but, deeper still, beneath the spirit of place there is the whole movement of life.” It sounds as though this is something you’ve experienced in reading this short story as well…

    • Wow, that’s interesting Marcie … yes, I think there is definitely a sense of a “brooding spirit of place” and I can see “the whole movement of life too” but I would never have thought of expressing it like that. The story focuses very much on the relationship between the two women and what they are seeing and thinking but there is definitely a sense of something much bigger at play. I like the phrase “universal rhythm” too. It is a simple story on the surface but the way she writes it conveys something much deeper and more complex. And it achieves that partly through being so careful and measured.

  4. I’m so sad that this woman was a pioneer and yet she’s not taught regularly. If she were, I would say least recognize the name. It was also in the 1970s that Zora Neale Hurston was rediscovered, but then she was taught, her books went back into print, etc.

  5. Thanks for sharing this. Will check this out. Coincidentally, I’ve just seen the Palme d’Or winner of this year ‘Anatomy of a Fall’, and it’s about a wife standing trial for the murder of her husband. Have u seen it? Powerful acting. Just posted a review.

    • Thanks Arti … I still have to check out the Heckel adaptation of this, which I believe is online, but no, I haven’t seen Anatomy of a fall. Sounds good though. Our film going and watching has been sorely lacking this year.

  6. I hadn’t heard of Glaspell until she appeared on the syllabus for a lit course I took several years ago. I’m not a great fan of short stories but loved this one – it was fascinating to compare it to the text of the play too.

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