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Analysis Of Henrik Ibsen 's ' A Doll House '

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Henrik Ibsens’s, A Doll House, details the lives of the Helmers, a seemingly perfect couple. As the story progresses from act to act, it becomes quite obvious that their relationship is everything but perfect. Complications arise quickly when a forged loan by Nora Helmer is brought to her husband Torvald’s attention. The prejudices women experience, particularly, Nora is a definite tone in this play. Henrick Ibsen does a great job at showing both sides of the oppression of women, particularly within the Helmers troubled marriage. Throughout the story the blatant oppression of women can be directly related to why, Nora, simply writing her signature on a document, could cause such a terrible chain of events. Could the time period be the only cause of this oppression? Maybe society is the true nature of this prejudice against women? The possibility of both is great, Ibsen is also very set on exposing and detailing the hardships women of this time experienced. The title of a play or story usually has some details of theme or even a foreshadowing of the story. A Doll House is a great example of this, a doll; an object manipulated by its owner, resides and makes a home. In the 19th century, women were to be obedient to their families and, once married, owned by their husbands. The need for communication also contributes the theme of this play. Nora and Torvald also communicate only on the most superficial level; he speaks from the conventional ideas of society but does not see

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