expectations and responsibilities for women. Women were supposed to be subjected to their husband and care for their kids. Literature was a way to send a message that something isn’t okay‚ society’s ranking of women then led to Henrik Ibsen to create “ A Doll’s House”. Henrik Ibsen uses the play “ A Doll’s House” to show and critique society’s expectations of women‚ society‚ and issues with the upper class during the victorian age. Don’t live by the world’s expectations. The play states in act two “Surely
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Nora‚ a complex character from Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House‚ changes throughout the play as the audience watches her develop into a very different woman‚ untypical of the Victorian era. As a house wife‚ she is expected to obey and respect her husband‚ however she misbehaves during the first act‚ behaves desperately in the second‚ and abandons her husband for her own sake in the final act. At the beginning of the play‚ Nora seems completely at ease and demonstrates many childlike aspects. Her relationship
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The Canterville Ghost is not just a short story by Oscar Wilde about a haunted mansion with a ghost; it is also a comedy and a parody of British aristocracy. In this story‚ the author makes fun of American pride and love of wealth by having the American Ambassador who buys the mansion say: "I will take the furniture and the ghost at a valuation. I have come from a modern country‚ where we have everything that money can buy". Oscar Wilde’s "The Canterville Ghost" is a story of a family’s relationship
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"Compare and contrast the characters of Hedda Gabler and Miss Julie in the plays by Ibsen and Strindberg. Support your findings with comments on the writers attitudes to their characters." August Strindberg and Henrik Ibsen were both great playwrights of the 19th century‚ and both played a large role in the evolution of modern day naturalism/ realism. The plays I will be discussing are Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler‚ (1890) and Strindberg’s Miss Julie (1888). In Karen’s lecture on Strindberg
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What good does always being earnest do you if you are not "Ernest"? Oscar Wilde’s play‚ "The Importance of Being Earnest"‚ explores exactly this notion‚ following two men who readily abandon their namesakes in order to win the affections of their respective fair ladies. The play opens in London with a conversation held between these two men‚ Jack Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff. However‚ at the play’s origin‚ Algernon only knows his friend as "Ernest". This rapidly changes with the aid of a cigarette
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De Profundis Oscar Wilde De Profundis DE PROFUNDIS . . . Suffering is one very long moment. We cannot divide it by seasons. We can only record its moods‚ and chronicle their return. With us time itself does not progress. It revolves. It seems to circle round one centre of pain. The paralysing immobility of a life every circumstance of which is regulated after an unchangeable pattern‚ so
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The role of Regina in Henrik Ibsen’s‚ Ghosts. Within the first scene‚ Regina’s duplicitous character is revealed as colloquial and disrespectful language is used when addressing the drunken Engstrand‚ ‘Make less noise with that hoof’ (Isben‚ 2008‚ p. 4). Isben modifies her language to enhance Regina’s obvious distaste for Engstrand and his way of being‚ as she speaks plainly towards her supposed father as she recalls his mistreatment of her as he referred to his daughter as ‘nothing’. The sexuality
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The Picture of Dorian Gray By Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray is a novel written by Irish writer‚ Oscar Wilde. The main character‚ rich and beautiful Dorian Gray‚ owns his portrait‚ which instead of him becomes older and where are traces of sin and mistakes. While Gray becomes uncontrollable and ruthless‚ his appearance stays youthful and flawless. At the end‚ in his despair‚ Gray destroys the picture and himself. The novel gives us a very good lesson – we can do whatever we want
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evidence that Dorian only has a superficial interest in her and also can be linked to aestheticism because Dorian only looks at her outside beauty and talent and not into the meaning of the girl inside. By using a metaphor such as “joy of a caged bird” Wilde is able to conjure the image of Sibyl as the bird trapped in a cage‚ purely for the enjoyment of an onlooker such as Dorian‚ the cage is her stage for her to please her master. This is significant in understanding why their relationship breaks down
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In the play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde‚ one can predict Algernon will go to Jack’s house and that Jack and Gwendolen will not get married. First‚ one can predict that Algernon will go to Jack’s place. At the beginning of the play‚ Algernon asked Jack questions about his house. Then‚ later in the play he writes down the address Jack gives Gwendolen. In the play it states‚ “Algernon‚ who has been carefully listening‚ smiles to himself‚ and writes the address on his shirtcuff. Then
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