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    Marc Peter English 102 19 October 2009 Henrik Ibsen’s "A Doll’s House" A Doll’s House is a play about society and the role we are given in it. The focus of the play is on women‚ with Nora as the main character. Even though this play is the story of Nora‚ who is a female‚ you would think that the play is directed mostly towards women and their lives‚ but the author did it in a way that everyone in general can understand it and it has a very important meanning to each and everyone of us. Ibsen

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    A Doll ’s House Henrik Ibsen ’s A Doll House centers around the life of Nora and Torvald‚ a young married couple from Norway with three small children. In the play‚ Ibsen takes the readers into the home of Nora and Torvald‚ allowing them to view the couple ’s relationship over a three-day period. Nora ’s introduction occurs in the first scene with a childlike enthusiasm for life and love of her husband and family. Later‚ when Torvald makes his entrance he appears as the doting yet somewhat condescending

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    Destiny Maxfield Mrs. Collar Engl. 1302 19 November 2012 A Critic’s Opinion of A Doll’s House In Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House many views could be seen from both sides of the gender world. Critics will argue about the true meaning of the story and why Ibsen wrote the story. The main points of the play that critics discuss are sexuality i.e. feminism‚ the wrong doing of the father figure‚ and spiritual revolution. I believe these critics are each right in their own way from my understanding of the

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    Ibsen wrote the play ’A Doll’s House’ in the late 1800’s when women’s rights was a very controversial subject and the male dominated society was not yet ready to acknowledge women as equal counterparts.The antagonist of the play‚’Nora’ abandoned her husband and children without so much as a second thought.The literal sound of it may make one think it was selfish of her but if one reads between the lines one realizes that her decision was the outcome of years of built up frustration because of being

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    A Doll House by Henrik Ibsen The Subordinate Woman 4/2/2010 DePauw University Mira Yaseen Mira Yaseen Professor Anthony Comm 214 2 April 2010 A Doll House by Henrik Ibsen The Subordinate Woman In the wake of realism‚ Ibsen came upon us with an outspoken controversial play that encompassed many realities of the conservative Victorian era. Presenting a genuine image of the societal issues at the time‚ A Doll House gives us an insight to the world of women in the nineteenth century; it

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    Animal imagery is prevalent in a variety of literary selections. This paper will focus on animal imagery in Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House by using the reader response strategy. In the play A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen‚ animal imagery is used in the development of the main character Nora. It is also later found that the animal imagery is a critical part in understanding who Nora is and how other characters perceive her. Ibsen uses creative animal imagery to develop Nora’s character throughout the

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    society make life altering decisions on a daily basis. Women today have prestigious and powerful careers unlike in earlier eras. It is more common for women to be full time employees than homemakers. In 1879‚ when Henrik Ibsen wrote “A Doll ’s House”‚ there was great controversy over the outcome of the play. Nora’s walking out on her husband and children was appalling to many audiences centuries ago. Divorce was unspoken‚ and a very uncommon occurrence. As years go by‚ society’s opinions on

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    Nora is the protagonist in “A Doll’s House”‚ and the audience has a constant view of how the patriarchy impacts her throughout the play‚ as she is on almost always during the play. The impact the patriarchy has on Nora progresses more and more until it is clear that Nora is deeply unsatisfied with life and that she cannot bare her married life anymore. She even considers suicide‚ shown by the lines “Never‚ never. Oh‚ the freezing black water! The depths—down— Oh‚ I wish it were over” . This alone

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    A Doll’s House Drama Analysis Kshana pressley Northwest Mississippi Community College Introduction During the nineteenth century‚ many restrictions and limitations were place on women in society. Marital roles‚ social roles‚ and work roles were very different for women during the nineteenth century than they are today (Hartman‚ 1999). Henrik Isben’s playwright‚ “A Doll House”‚ actively voices women rights many years ago. The marital life Nora Helmer is portrayed throughout the play‚

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    Lizzie Turovsky A Doll’s House The play‚ A Doll’s House‚ by Henrik Ibsen‚ showcases a traditional marriage of a middle class couple in the Victorian Era. The marriages in the late nineteenth century were severely confining; the woman’s role was to be nurturing and submissive‚ while the man’s was to be powerful in both his work and domestic life. Similarly to these traditional matrimonies‚ the marriage of the protagonists‚ Nora and Torvald‚ emphasizes the implausibility of individuals to both meet

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