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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper compares and contrasts the feminine gender issues revealed in the two plays “Trifles” and “Sure Thing.”
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HV2fmply.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
feminine gender issues in the two works. Discussion Sure Thing is a two-character play that explores, in a series of rapid-fire one-liners, how two people can establish a relationship. Bill
and Betty meet by accident in a caf?, and the merry-go-round starts when Bill asks if a chair is taken. When Betty says it is, an off-stage bell rings and
the scene "resets." Bill asks his question again, and this time she says no, its not taken but she is expecting someone. The bell rings again-as it does every time
one of the characters says something negative to the other. The result is that the scene plays over and over again, in fits and starts, as the two characters progress
from a flirtation that Betty isnt sure about to the point where they have a chance to develop a real relationship. The title refers to Bettys need to have a
relationship that is lasting; a "sure thing," in other words. When Bill first comes in, she uses the phrase "sure thing" to dismiss him, but as they fence with one
another, the words become quite different. They are what shes looking for. The message here with regard to women seems to be that its difficult to find true love, and
that women are sometimes willing to take a chance unless they have a substantial chance of being right. Although the characters here are just at the beginning of their relationship,
Betty has no intention of taking it further without some assurance that Bill is serious and will be a good companion. As the play see-saws back and forth, the
two characters reveal different facets of themselves, so that at some points Betty seems to be "too good" for Bill, and at others, a viewer thinks hes "too good" for
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