For instance, Ibsen and his wife Suzannah had a fake marriage. Their relationship looked perfect from the outside, but on the inside, it was gloomy and filled with unhappiness. The two grew apart emotionally as the years progressed. Ibsen also had multiple affairs with different women (Brunsdale). In the play, Nora and Helmer have a false marriage because from the outside, they look happy and in love, but on the inside, Nora is miserable with her meek life. Although Nora did leave Helmer, the Ibsens managed to remain together (Ibsen 114). Ibsen also had a friend, Laura Kieler, who took out a secret loan without her husband’s approval, just like Nora did. Both Kieler and Nora were caught, but Kieler was sent to an asylum by her husband, whereas Nora simply left her husband (Brunsdale). Another similarity is that both Helmer and Ibsen had financial problems shadowing their lives. They both felt as though they were failures until they could properly provide for their families. Ibsen was unsuccessful as a writer when he first started out, and Helmer was insecure about the fact that he could not spoil his wife to the
For instance, Ibsen and his wife Suzannah had a fake marriage. Their relationship looked perfect from the outside, but on the inside, it was gloomy and filled with unhappiness. The two grew apart emotionally as the years progressed. Ibsen also had multiple affairs with different women (Brunsdale). In the play, Nora and Helmer have a false marriage because from the outside, they look happy and in love, but on the inside, Nora is miserable with her meek life. Although Nora did leave Helmer, the Ibsens managed to remain together (Ibsen 114). Ibsen also had a friend, Laura Kieler, who took out a secret loan without her husband’s approval, just like Nora did. Both Kieler and Nora were caught, but Kieler was sent to an asylum by her husband, whereas Nora simply left her husband (Brunsdale). Another similarity is that both Helmer and Ibsen had financial problems shadowing their lives. They both felt as though they were failures until they could properly provide for their families. Ibsen was unsuccessful as a writer when he first started out, and Helmer was insecure about the fact that he could not spoil his wife to the