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A Doll's House Entrapment Essay

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Henrik Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House depicts the concept of entrapment. Nora Helmer, the protagonist of the play, is confined in her domestic life by the restricted views of her domineering husband Torvald Helmer. The detailed stage set symbolically represents an idealized world, a doll’s house where Nora lives oblivious to the fact that this confinement is hindering her from further development in life. Ibsen illustrates the Helmers’ house itself as a cage that imprisons Nora by employing a static stage set. The three acts of the play solely take place in Helmer’s home. The fixed stage set evokes an image of a doll trapped in its doll house, symbolically portraying Nora’s physical entrapment in her house, her marriage and society. Ibsen characterizes Nora as “a doll-wife and papa’s doll-child.” (66) Her doll-like action of changing costumes, including a Neapolitan fisher girl …show more content…

In her doll house where [a fire burns in the stove] Nora can see “it is winter” outside from her small window frame, which is her only way of seeing the outside world. (Ibsen 3) Ibsen uses contrasting imagery with fire representing a comfortable life, and winter symbolizing the world’s harsh reality. However, Nora does not realize the severity of winter and only appreciates it as a pretty season glimpsed upon through a small window frame. The difference between her childlike view of the world and its reality shows that Nora’s perspective, like the window, is restricted and narrow. Again, Ibsen asserts that Nora will never fully broaden her constricted perception of the world unless she raises her awareness by having real experiences. The audience can perceive the symbolic meaning of the window as a psychic prison from which is impossible to expand one’s vision of the world and how her life might function outside the familiar domestic

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