Preview

How Are Nora And Louse Mallard Alike

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
96 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
How Are Nora And Louse Mallard Alike
Louse Mallard and Nora were both feeling the same way. They both felt trapped in a marriage that they wanted to get out of. They both lived in a time where the woman stayed home and took care of the house and children, while the men worked outside the home. Neither women really had a say so in anything that went on in the home. They did exactly what they were told by their husbands and did not have much freedom. Nora and Louse wanted freedom, and took advantage of it when they had the chance.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Nora is unhappy with her life and wants to walk away from thing. In this book “A Doll House” showed how women were treated in the 19 century men were always in charge of the women. In my opinion women should have just as much control as the men did. Everything should be equal. I don't think gender should determine if your in charge or not. In this play marriage is displayed as one person controlling the other. Marriage extent are to bring a man and women together as husband and wife. Not to worry about financial problems there suppose to be happen and create a bond…

    • 592 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In today’s society, women are independent, have their own voice, and hold job positions that were once never available to them. Before the enactment of women’s rights, women were confined to the lives of their husband’s. Mrs. Mallard and Delia are two very different women who share similarities in their current state of life. Mrs. Mallard understands the “right” way for women to behave within society, is constantly looked after by her peers, and realizes the powers that men and her husband are granted within their society. Delia is a hard-working African-American woman who is the breadwinner within her marriage and plays the role that her husband would be expected to play. Both of these women go through unanticipated life changing experiences…

    • 1765 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Lennie and Curley’s wife come across as very different characters. They differ greatly in appearance, mentality, and personality. Despite their differences, though, Lennie and Curley’s wife are surprisingly similar in the way they both constantly need to create physical connections. As a result, they are able to relate to each other, and when they are finally alone together they address each other’s needs, which leads to a tragic end.…

    • 1293 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nora Dramatic Irony

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Nora's epiphany occurs when the truth is finally revealed. As Torvald unleashes his revulsion against Nora and her crime of forgery, the protagonist realizes that her husband is not who she thought he was at all. Torvald has no intention of taking the blame for Nora's crime. She thought for certain that he would selflessly give up everything for her, like she given up so much for him. When he fails to do this, she accepts the fact that their marriage has been an illusion. In this moment Nora’s eyes and mind finally become clear of any delusions she once possessed. Nora was dominated and controlled by her father before marriage and afterwards it was her husband dominating her. Torvald never treated her as an equal. She had existed for her husband and she had always expected that her husband would come to her aid when she was in trouble. She had been waiting for miracles to happen. Nora feared that Krogstad would expose everything and that their family would come undone. Contrary to her expectation, Torvald behaved like a hypocrite concerned more with societies idea of morality and a notion of social prestige, not with his wife's welfare and care. He came out in his true colors. Nora realized that her husband didn't see her as an individual. She wanted to dissolve her ties with him by abandoning him and the children. She thought her duty toward herself was above her duty as a…

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    At the start of the play, Nora is seen as a caring mother and wife; however, this is an affectation of joy and contentment. In reality, her true character is held enslaved by her tyrannical husband. Her demeaning nicknames, “skylark” and “little song bird” truly are a metaphor for her mental and physical imprisonment to the societal roles of being a mother and wife. Nora accepts this captivity, however, evident through her own use of her nicknames throughout the story in order to pry money from her husband and follow all of his commands. At this point, the audience begins to sense superficiality and materialistic behavior from Nora, but this view soon changes as Ibsen reveals his realistic writing style. Deceit is first seen as she consumes macaroons secretively, in spite of her husband’s disapproval. She begins to reassure to Torvald that she, “should not think of going against (his) wishes’,”(Ibsen,1.4) and is dishonest once again when telling him Chritine Linde and Dr. Rank brought her the desserts. This fraudulence continues as she searches for a way to hastily pay a debt which her financially independent husband is unaware of. She hides the truth from her husband in the same manner she participates in a game of “hide-and-seek” with her…

    • 2454 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mallard began to come to terms with the implication of her husband’s sudden death. The passage reads, “She said it over and over under her breath: “free, free, free!”… She did not stop to ask if it were or were not a monstrous joy that held her.” Mrs. Mallard is quite aware of how wrong it must look to be feeling liberated by her husband’s death, however she would not let herself feel guilty. She had lived long enough under her husband’s will and now she gladly welcomed the freedom that came with his passing. Thus, this passage is effective in illustrating that the societal expectations for her marriage had ultimately subdued and repressed Mrs. Mallard’s…

    • 461 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mrs. Mallard’s expression of overbearing devastation that ended her life accounts for the rash behavior she shows through her grief. Her death, as a result, is the icing on the cake and topped off all of the unorthodox demeanors she express leading up to it. It is mentioned previously that the news of Mr. Mallard’s death was broken carefully to the fragile hearted Mrs. Mallard. There is an unexpected revelation when Mrs. Mallard hears the news of her husband’s death, and she felt relief rather than despair. She reacts by, “abandon[ing] herself a little whispered word escaped her slightly parted lips. She said it over and over under her breath: "free, free, free!"” (443) Mrs. Mallard is excited to have finally gotten a chance to be her own person. She begins planning and looking forward to a life of freedom without the constriction marriage included. Her excitement would be short lived due to her husband’s reemergence, which was yet another unexpected twists to the plot. Seeing her husband alive and realizing that she would not have the freedom she longed for ended hope for the life she wanted. “It was Brently Mallard who entered, a little travel-stained, composedly carrying his grip-sack and umbrella. He had been far from the scene of the accident, and did not even know there had been one.”(444) Mrs. Mallard’s reaction, and the final event of the…

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    And anyway, I’m freeing you. From everything. Complete freedom on both sides. See here’s your ring. Give me mine (The Norton Anthology of Drama, 247). The fact that Nora has the audacity to walk out on her children and husband even though it goes against nineteenth century views of women it shows the audience how Nora is a strong, powerful woman who does not need a husband to control her.…

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Her life was ruled and controlled by her husband Torvald. Her husband especially did not respect or treat Nora with equality. Nora spent eight years of her life with Torvald, and that is where she had made a huge mistake. Nora found out her husband’s true colours when it was too late, if she had found out who her husband really was and how the love he was showing to Nora was nothing but false she could have left her husband before the eight years and lived her life with freedom. Nora can find someone that actually treats her with respects, equality, and with…

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In both works, the main characters’ curiosity, branches out into individuality. For Nora Helmer, her world is one-dimensional. The same daily rituals, including domestic responsibilities and to first be a wife and mother before all, are on replay. However, when Nora begins to see the complexity of her status, she questions it. As she questions her status, her curiosity steepens. “You are just like the others. They all think that I am incapable of anything really serious…” (p. 20) It’s like she's asking, ‘Is this fair that I am condemned to only my domestic ability? Why can’t I function independently in society as all men do? “Because one is a women, it does not necessarily follow that….” (p.30) Just this little reflection, shows a spark of…

    • 143 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Shirley Jackson Patriarchy

    • 1048 Words
    • 5 Pages

    These two characters are the opposite of the character of Mrs. Mallard due to the fact that instead of seeking for their freedom and their independence they decide to isolate themselves. This happened due to the circumstances that they found themselves in and also because of the society’s mentality. Eveline in one hand had the chance to run away with her lover, Frank, from the horror that her father caused her. During her decision making, she got caught up in so many things that she feared. One of those things was fear of the unknown. She was so caught up in her life and in the terror that followed her in a daily basis that the thought of leaving it was too tough for her. Eveline was seeking Argentina as a place of hope and savior from her father’s violence, where people would finally appreciate her effort and would give her the respect that she never got. Although due to these factors she ended up not making a step forward towards her future but instead her thoughts got the best of her so she had decided to continue living on that “cage” that her father had created for her. (Joyce par.5, 12, 13) Another brief example from literature is Tessie from Jackson’s “The lottery.” Tessie is Bill Hutchinson’s wife and during their ritual whom only men are allowed to take part in, Tessie ends up being the victim of the horrible tradition. No one in the town has the courage to speak up about the inhumanity that this tradition of stoning “the winner” to death is representing. As a brief conclusion Jackson’s “The Lottery” marks, not a winner, but a loser who gets stoned to death by the village.(Jackson…

    • 1048 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Edna and Addie both were seeking autonomy. Unfortunately, Edna was a married woman from 19-century era who did not any options to improve her situation. In the 19-century era women were very limited by society. Women did not have the opportunity of choosing what they wanted for their lives.in others worlds women didn’t have rights at all. Society expectations were very clear; women supposed to be virtuous. Being virtuous meant being to marry and have children. Moreover, women supposed to be in charge of the house because they weren’t capable to manage the outside world. Edna realized that society expectation were in reality limitations. She wanted to have the freedom of choosing for herself the love of her live and the live she wanted to live.…

    • 221 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story mainly discusses the woman’s regained freedom but, at the end of the story, the woman’s death shows that it is premature to think that women can recover their autonomy. The story begins when Louise Mallard hears the news of her husband Brently’s death in a train wreck from Richards, her husband’s friend, and Josephine, her sister. Because Louise has heart disease, they tell the news with great care. Louise first feels a great loss and cries. Then she goes to her room alone. Gazing vacantly out the window, she comes to discover her new side of which she hasn’t even been aware. She realizes that she has won back her freedom which has been deprived by her husband. While she is picturing her coming free days with great pleasure, Josephine, her sister, keeps knocking at the door, being worried about Louise. Louise comes out of the room and Louise and Josephine come across Richards at the bottom of the stairs. Just at that moment, Brently, Louise’s husband, comes back surprisingly, and Louise dies. The doctor says that she has died of joy, but only readers know the truth; even if it is a period that women long and struggle for the day of free, so far, it is only a dream. In other words, as yet, they are living in an androcentric…

    • 1144 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the play, A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams, Blanche and Stanley are well-known, as opposite characters with symbols of conflicting deals, but these two characters also have many similarities with each other. For example, Stanley and Blanche both have a well-built desire for love. Stanley, has no need to seek for love because he yearns, his marriage life with his wife Stella. Blanche, on the other hand, is seeking for respect and love for a new husband, since she lost her last husband. Also, Stanley and Stella are a couple that appears to be loving and compassionate with each other, until Blanche comes for a visit to New Orleans to live with the couple. With conflicting issues dealing with Blanche and Stanley, it causes an unhealthy, abusive problems with Stella and Stanley’s marriage.…

    • 175 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nora’s final walk out from the house seems to be a selfish woman, but it was the example of power and strength of struggle women. Nora wasn’t agreed to live life with Torvalds’s condition. She argue that, “I believe that before all else, I’m a human being, no less than you-or anyway, I ought to try to become one (Ibsen 840).” Here, Ibsen clearly expresses the independent nature of women. Nora believes that women had a right to develop their own individuality, but in reality her role has been often self-sacrificial. She always been treated as a narrow house wife by Torvalds. She shows her eagerness, “you thought it fun to be in love with me, that’s all (Ibsen 838).”Her biggest discovery was to save her husband’s life, but she disappointed when it became an unforgivable crime in the eyes of her husband and society. At the last, she left her husband and children was begets action in her life as a feminist. The whole play based on the beginning of feminism in 19th centuries. Nora who always thought that she was nothing else than the entertainment of her husband transcend her into a independent woman was the most dramatic change on the…

    • 735 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays