A Doll’s House A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen was an interesting play to read. This play is about a woman named Nora who was treated like a child by her husband and whom though her problems would be over because her husband found a new highly pay job. Also, the main idea behind this play is about the importance of happiness and freedom. This play tells us about happiness because Nora was not happy in marriage; her husband was not treating her the right way. So, to find happiness Nora finally files for a divorce. She was married for years; she has the better learn about her husband and learn his true identity. At some points Nora taught as if the new job her husband found was going to solve her problems and make her husband treat her better. However, since with money she cannot buy happiness, he was still treating her as if she was the cause of all his problems. Moreover, I found Nora very courageous to decide to file for a …show more content…
Also, her husband was controlling and she was very dependent of him. However, she realize that having her freedom was more important to her rather than any relationship or money. Moreover, being in a controlling relationship or marriage mean that the person being controlled lacks of freedom. When we are children we feel controlled by our parent, that’s why when we grow up, most people who want their independence deicide to live their parent’s house to have their own apartment. Following the same topic, being in a marriage when one partner is controlling the other, it seems as if the controlled person is still immature to take care of herself and need to be controlled by their partner. Furthermore, I have compassion for people that are in controlled relationships because me I cannot tolerate that kind of behavior. Also, since I am a very revered person, I always demand a lot of space and privacy from my family and
A Doll’s House was published in Norway in 1879 by Henrik Isben. He is known as the father of Modern Theatre. He is also referred as the father of realism. The play is very interesting because of the funny dialogue, Ibsen 's view of the place of ladies in the public eye and the unique characters. The main characters of the play is Nora Helmer and her husband Torvald Helmer. Imagine what it would be like to live in a doll 's home? It 's a house in which you are controlled and have no energy to settle on any solid choice; It 's a house in which you are a play thing for another person 's amusement. This sounds a ton like an awful marriage, so it 's a house in which your husband holds the satchel strings, in a manner of speaking, and abandons you with no influence over your family 's accounts. In fact, your husband keeps you on a tightrope. Such is the perceived life of Nora Helmer.
In A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, is a play about the personal revolution of a Norwegian housewife. Nora appears to be happy with mindlessly obeying her husband, until it is discovered that she has a secret debt that she has hidden from him. Krogstad, Nora’s loaner, threatens to reveal the debt to her husband. When it is inadvertently revealed, Nora realizes the lack of depth of her husband’s feelings for her and leaves their established household and family to find her own personal identity. The theme of A Doll’s House is that societal norms restrict personal freedom.
A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen was originally considered by critics and scholars as a play about feminism. This is a believable idea as the play’s protagonist, Nora, goes through a personal journey where she realises that she is an independent woman and that she does not need a husband, especially like Torvald, to live. Nevertheless, many people believe that the play is more humanist than feminist. According to Ibsen, he wrote the story with a humanist eye. This point can be challenged by saying he certainly thought he was writing in a humanist eye, while instead, he was actually focussing on feminism, which is often considered a form of humanism. It is clear because he is solely focussing on the feminist aspects of humanism, rather than incorporate ideas of race, age or religion. Therefore, the play is surely feminist. This idea can be highlighted by talking about how Nora slowly acts more and more out of her gender role, how Mrs. Linde lives her life and how Nora has a complicated relationship with her children.
A Doll 's House by Henrik Ibsen, is a play that has been written to withstand all time. In this play Ibsen highlights the importance of women’s rights. During the time period of the play these rights were neglected. Ibsen depicts the role of the woman was to stay at home, raise the children and attend to her husband during the 19th century. Nora is the woman in A Doll House who plays is portrayed as a victim. Michael Meyers said of Henrik Ibsen 's plays: "The common denominator in many of Ibsen 's dramas is his interest in individuals struggling for and authentic identity in the face of social conventions. This conflict often results in his characters ' being divided between a sense of duty to themselves and their responsibility to others." All of the aspects of this quote can be applied to the play A Doll House, in Nora Helmer 's character, who throughout much of the play is oppressed, presents an inauthentic identity to the audience and throughout the play attempts to discovery her authentic identity.
Henrik Ibsen's, A Doll's House is definitely a unique story written by a very intelligent, complicated writer. I believe he intentionally wrote the play in a manner which would lead every reader to draw his own conclusions. He forces us to find our own interpretation of the play in context with our personal lives and experiences with the opposite sex. The theme may be interpreted by many as a study of the moral laws that men and women are required to follow by nature. I believe it is primarily based on the gender stereotypes that determine the role of women in society.
A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, portrays a young married woman, Nora, who plays a dramatic role of deception and self-indulgence. The author creates a good understanding of a woman’s role by assuming Nora is an average housewife who does not work; her only job is to maintain the house and raise the children like a stereotypical woman that cannot work or help society. In reality, she is not an average housewife in that she has a hired maid who deals with the house and children. Although Ibsen focuses on these “housewife” attributes, Nora’s character is ambitious, naive, and somewhat cunning. She hides a dark secret from her husband that not only includes borrowing money, but also forgery. Nora’s choices were irrational; she handled the
In his play, A Doll's House, Henrik Ibsen depicts a female protagonist, Nora Helmer, who dares to defy her husband and forsake her "duty" as a wife and mother to seek out her individuality. A Doll's House challenges the patriarchal view held by most people at the time that a woman's place was in the home. Many women could relate to Nora's situation. Like Nora, they felt trapped by their husbands and their fathers; however, they believed that the rules of society prevented them from stepping out of the shadows of men. Through this play, Ibsen stresses the importance of women's individuality. A Doll's House combines realistic characters, fascinating imagery, explicit stage directions, and
The enforcement of specific gender roles by societal standards in 19th century married life proved to be suffocating. Women were objects to perform those duties for which their gender was thought to have been created: to remain complacent, readily accept any chore and complete it “gracefully” (Ibsen 213). Contrarily, men were the absolute monarchs over their respective homes and all that dwelled within. In Henrik Ibsen’s play, A Doll’s House, Nora is subjected to moral degradation through her familial role, the consistent patronization of her husband and her own assumed subordinance. Ibsen belittles the role of the housewife through means of stage direction, diminutive pet names and through Nora’s interaction with her morally ultimate
At the beginning of the play, Nora seems to have a mind and behavior more like a child than a grown woman. Nora also seems to not mind being treated like a doll because she is being pampered by her now wealthy husband. Nora’s husband, Torvald, seems to thinks that she is sometimes silly, and we see this with the one of the lines from the play, “Are you scatterbrains off again?” (Ibsen 1449). Although it seems Nora is nothing merely than a childish and ditzy person, she shows us the good qualities within her as well. Nora would be considered by many as a daring and determined woman because of what she does for her husband. Throughout Act One, we see many different characteristics from Nora already. We see courage and
A Doll's House, by Henrik Ibsen, was written during a time when the role of woman was that of comforter, helper, and supporter of man. The play generated great controversy due to the fact that it featured a female protagonist seeking individuality. A Doll's House was one of the first plays to introduce woman as having her own purposes and goals. The heroine, Nora Helmer, progresses during the course of the play eventually to realize that she must discontinue the role of a doll and seek out her individuality. David Thomas describes the initial image of Nora as "that of a doll wife who revels in the thought of luxuries that can now be afforded, who is become with flirtation, and engages
I really liked this play along with the other ones we have read in class. However, this plays seems to stand out to me because it takes a feminist point of view. It is always good to go inside the role of a woman and see how they feel and act upon their own thoughts. Good literature helps us to learn about how other people think and act. Moreover, when we can relate the characters actions to our lives or the world around us the meaning is more personal and beneficial. For some reason, I feel like many women out there really do feel like Nora. They are trapped in economic circumstances because it is the safe way to go. Many times woman do not truly love their husbands and are rather there just to live a safe and comfortable life.
Morality is defined as a recognition or belief that explains why some behaviors are bad or good. In simple words, morality refers to values relating to the distinction between wrong and right or good and bad. Few morals are easily accepted and are only questioned by some fringes of society who might disagree with such morals. These individuals on the fringes can be bad or good. The ones who reject socially accepted moral does not necessarily mean that they are good persons. Thus, one can say that each individual has morals that are different from each other (Joseph).
A Doll’s house was written in 1879 by Henrik Ibsen, a Norwegian playwright. The play was originally written in Danish then later translated. This play has three acts and eleven characters. A Doll’s House shows Nora Helmer’s awakening from her previous life of a domestic lifestyle. Having been ruled her whole life by either her father or her husband, Torvald, Nora comes to question everything she has thought about her marriage. She borrowed money from a man of lowly status, named Krogstad, by forging her father’s signature. She was able to pay for a trip to Italy to save her sick husband’s life. He didn’t know where the money came from, he just thought it was from her father. Since then, she has had to do many odd jobs to find ways to pay back her loan. She became particularly concerned with money and the ways of a complex world (A Doll’s House Summary).
Henrik Ibsen one of his most famous literature works “A doll’s house” and Kate Chopin’s short story “The story of an hour” portrays to the Victorian era, when women didn’t have rights. Both authors were born in an era where women didn’t have rights, and that women faced many aspects in life, such as being submissive to their husband’s, they were viewed as possessions than as people, and live a life that they didn’t want to live during the Victorian age. Even though Ibsen did not live the life of a women, he still saw how women were being mistreated. “Born into the upper-middle class himself, Ibsen not only understood the importance of social class, but also the expectations placed on its members” (). Ibsen’s play corresponds to his
A Doll’s House was published in Norway in 1879 by Henrik Isben. He is known as the father of Modern Theatre. He is also referred as the father of realism. The play is very interesting because of the funny dialogue, the unique characters, and Ibsen 's view of the place of ladies in the public eye. The main characters of the play is Nora Helmer and her husband Torvald Helmer. Imagine what it would be like to live in a doll 's home? It 's a house in which you are controlled and have no energy to settle on any solid choice; It 's a house in which you are a play thing for another person 's amusement. This sounds a ton like an awful marriage, so it 's a house in which your husband holds the satchel strings, in a manner of speaking, and abandons you with no influence over your family 's accounts. In fact, your husband keeps you on a tightrope. Such is the perceived life of Nora Helmer.