Eleanor and Park and The Doll’s House show how class really separates people and can affect relationships. In Eleanor and Park, Eleanor comes from a family that is struggling. You can tell how a family is financially by their home. Eleanor lives in a run down house with her blank siblings. She shares one room with her blank sister and blank brother. The house only has one bathroom and it doesn't even have a door! We also know that her stepfather is abusive and doesn't work. This leaves Eleanor's mom to …show more content…
His grandparents even live a few houses down. Park and his brother have their own, spacious rooms. Everything is of the norm for him. Just like Park the Burnell girls live a normal life. They lived in a nice, huge house. They are in the wealthier side. The Burnell girls even owned their own dollhouse. This dollhouse was perfect, right down to the little lamp. It represents the girls lives and how they live. In Eleanor and Park, Park is hesitant to befriend Eleanor at first. The other kids make fun of Eleanor and he doesn't want to be associated with someone who would hurt his popularity. It takes a while, but Park decides to talk to Eleanor and they end up having many things in common. He looks past Eleanor's differences and sees her for who she really is. Park becomes friends and even more than friends with Eleanor by liking her and not where she comes from or how things are at home. In The Doll's House, The Burnell girls are told not to talk or even be near the Kelveys girls. The Kelveys girls are separated from everyone else at school and they only have each other. They are bullied just like Eleanor. Just like Park, Kezia Burnell realizes it's not fair or worth all the pain they are causing the