Juliet carefully plans to avoid her marriage with Paris and to finds a way to live happily with Romeo, but Nora does not care about how society will treat her when she departs from Torvald’s home forever, leaving behind her wedding ring and keys. Nevertheless, both Nora and Juliet “refuse to be imprisoned in a conventional marriage” (Thomas http://ic.galegroup.com). Juliet is the emotionally and mentally stronger one in her relationship with Romeo, but Nora seems to be weak and helpless compared to Torvald’s “manly independence” (Ibsen 12). In spite of their differences, both women defy their roles as women in society and refuse to let their “responses and actions to be controlled by social conditioning” (Thomas http://ic.galegroup.com). Juliet has the man-like will and the power to kill herself if her plan to drink the sleeping potion fails, but Nora enters the outside world without the assistance of others even though she does not know what she is to face because she doesn’t care what society thinks. Despite their differences, both women “engage in behavior normally exclusive to men” by taking risks to escape bondage to those who they do not love (Mansour http://ic.galegroup.com). Nora does not care about what society thinks when she leaves Torvald. Juliet pretends to die rather than marry Paris, shows how she will not comply with her family’s
Juliet carefully plans to avoid her marriage with Paris and to finds a way to live happily with Romeo, but Nora does not care about how society will treat her when she departs from Torvald’s home forever, leaving behind her wedding ring and keys. Nevertheless, both Nora and Juliet “refuse to be imprisoned in a conventional marriage” (Thomas http://ic.galegroup.com). Juliet is the emotionally and mentally stronger one in her relationship with Romeo, but Nora seems to be weak and helpless compared to Torvald’s “manly independence” (Ibsen 12). In spite of their differences, both women defy their roles as women in society and refuse to let their “responses and actions to be controlled by social conditioning” (Thomas http://ic.galegroup.com). Juliet has the man-like will and the power to kill herself if her plan to drink the sleeping potion fails, but Nora enters the outside world without the assistance of others even though she does not know what she is to face because she doesn’t care what society thinks. Despite their differences, both women “engage in behavior normally exclusive to men” by taking risks to escape bondage to those who they do not love (Mansour http://ic.galegroup.com). Nora does not care about what society thinks when she leaves Torvald. Juliet pretends to die rather than marry Paris, shows how she will not comply with her family’s