In a gender analysis of Susan Glaspell's play Trifles, a student would MOST LIKELY conclude that
A. the women decide to save Minnie from conviction because they don't believe that the men understand her situation well enough to judge her the dialogue between the men investigating the murder scene is reflective of the cultural standards of the historical period in which the play is set
B. the apparent psychological state that Minnie was in at the time that she murdered her husband absolves her of guilt in the opinions of the women
C. the author's background of living in a farming community in the early twentieth century had a powerful effect on the themes of the play