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    Dana Schrenker O’Connor April 20‚ 2010 A Doll’s House A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen‚ is a play about a woman who realizes that she is worth more than she has been given credit. Her whole life she was treated like a little doll; too fragile to do anything serious‚ too frail to be troubled with real business. She was the wife‚ mother and homemaker. The only things she was perceived as capable of were running the home‚ raising the children and looking pretty. This was

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    in a good manner; although some may see it as the punishment or the reward that a person deserves on account of their actions and decisions. The plays “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen and “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell were written in an era were society has a different aspect on the way women should be than we do now. In the plays “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen and “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell the female characters and the male characters see justice in a different point of view.

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    Many works of literature in the form of books and plays don’t usually get a big screen adaptation. However‚ A Doll’s House has been blessed to have two major adaptations as well as some minor ones. Of the two major ones‚ the one that is viewed as superior is known as the Anthony Hopkins version. This is of course because the biggest actor in the production was Anthony Hopkins so it is easy to label this version the Anthony Hopkins version. This version is superior because it gives the character’s

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    Textual Analysis of ‘A Doll’s House’ Act III‚ pp. 96-104 Henrik Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’ shows a woman turning her back on her husband and her children at the end. It was quite a novelty for a play of the Victorian era to have such an ending for it challenges the society and its norm. In the third act‚ the protagonist Nora decides to abandon her husband Torvald and her children after seeing her husband’s reaction to a letter‚ revealing that Nora committed a crime to save her husband’s life. She

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    A Doll’s House consists of two examples of foiling. One being Nora Helmer to Christine Linde. At the start of the novel it seems that Nora has it all‚ a loving and wealthy husband‚ a few children‚ and she doesn’t have to work. All she has is some debt that she pays off with her allowance. Unlike Nora‚ Christine has had a life of hardship. She works for a living and has no family because she is alone. By the end of the novel‚ it seems as if the two have switched places. Nora has become alone and deserts

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    reasonable human being‚ just as you are – or‚ at all events‚ that I must try and become one” (p.76). What possible factors can influence a woman to leave her husband and children behind? In the play‚ A Doll’s House‚ Henrik Ibsen wants to prove the importance of people finding themselves. A Doll’s House demonstrates a woman who takes on her wifely duties and behaves as her superior initiates. After being emotionally sheltered her entire life‚ Nora Helmer finally finds inner strength and chooses to live

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    Foil Characters in A Doll’s House Henrik Ibsen creates characters in A Doll’s House who change throughout the play. Ibsen’s use of foil characters helps the reader understand each individual character better. Some of the characters in the play are perceived as opposites but in fact share several similarities. Krogstad and Torvald‚ Christine and Nora‚ and Krogstad/Christine’s relationship and Torvald/Nora’s relationship are all foils to each other. Foil characters are mirror images of each other;

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    Sarah Liccardo Professor DeGregorio Writing 106 27 February Ibsen’s Portrayal of Stereotypical Gender Roles Hendrik Ibsen’s famous‚ yet controversial‚ play “A Doll’s House‚” explores the apparent gender discrimination that greatly impacted women’s lives in the 19th century. Ibsen successfully sheds light on women’s rights and their lack of “importance” during this time by creating the fictional character‚ Nora Helmer‚ who is the main personality in the play. During the time period in which this

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    Abby Kreczkowski Professor Galvez English Composition II 27 October 2016 “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen “A Doll’s House” is a play by Henrik Ibsen is about Nora Helmer‚ a woman who once secretly borrowed a large sum of money so that her husband‚ Torvald‚ could recover from a serious illness. She never told him of this loan and had to secretly pay it back in small amounts‚ using her allowance for the house. Nora’s husband thinks of her as careless and immature and refers to her as his doll

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    prologues and epilogues‚ act and scene division‚ even carefully placed intermissions. Discuss the dramatic uses made of these divisions in atleast two plays you have studied. “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen is divided into three acts. In act one‚ the transition between Nora and the porter that open “A Doll’s House” is immediately puts the money‚ which emerges as one of the most significant symbolism that forces the play’s conflict as it concerns genders‚ classes and moral standards. Similarly

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