Susan Glaspell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Susan Keating Glaspell (1 July 1876 – 27 July 1948) was an American Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and bestselling novelist. She was a founding member of the Provincetown Players, one of the most ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_Glaspell
The Susan Glaspell Society ... The purpose of the Susan Glaspell Society is the recognition of Susan Glaspell as a major American dramatist and fiction writer though the ongoing publication of high-quality scholarship and critical analysis of all her works, participation in national and international conferences,
academic.shu.edu/glaspell/ academic.shu.edu/glaspell/
To most readers, Susan Glaspell (1876-1948) is still known primarily as the author of Trifles, the frequently anthologized, classic feminist play about two women's secret discovery of a wife's murder of her husband, or the short-story "A Jury of Her Peers," a re-writing of that piece.
academic.shu.edu/glaspell/aboutglaspell_files/aboutglas... academic.shu.edu/glaspell/aboutglaspell_files/aboutglaspell.html
Susan Glaspell was born in 1882 in Davenport, Iowa. She graduated from Drake University and worked as a journalist on the staff of the Des Moines Daily News. When her stories began appearing in magazines such as Harper's and The Ladies' Home Journal, she gave up the newspaper business.
www.learner.org/exhibits/literature/notread/author.html
Chapter 8: Susan Glaspell (1876-1948) ... As one of the founders of the Playwright's Theatre, also known as the Provincetown Players, Susan Glaspell led a revolution in American theater. Between 1916 and 1922, the Provincetown Players produced new plays by young playwrights like her and EO'N.
www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap8/glaspell.html www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap8/glaspell.html
Christiana Langenberg, Marty Graham, and Barb Duffelmeyer discuss Susan Glaspell's "A Jury of Her Peers," a play set in turn-of-the-century Iowa which sparks debate on men's and women's differing sense of justice...
lectures.eserver.org/1040
Susan Glaspell is an interesting example of the late nineteenth-century woman writer, raised in the local color tradition, who radically altered her life and art after her marriage and moved east.
www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguid... www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/glaspell.html
Glaspell, who struggled with similar themes and concerns, inherited a rich legacy from these women. Indeed, when Susan Glaspell and her husband George Cook arrived in Greenwich Village in the middle of an artistic revival and renaissance, Glaspell began to write openly about these issues.
itech.fgcu.edu/faculty/wohlpart/alra/glaspell.htm itech.fgcu.edu/faculty/wohlpart/alra/glaspell.htm