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Essay on Female Protagonist in Hedda Gabler and A Doll House

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Hedda Gabler and A Doll House are indubitably two of Ibsen’s most well-known and finest works. In both, the central protagonists are women in strained marriages who do not accept societal norms. Both are independently-minded, but Nora in A Doll House still strongly feels the duty of marriage and motherhood, while Hedda in Hedda Gabler seems to think little of the institution of marriage and duty. Both A Doll House and Hedda Gabler were sensational in their times. A Doll House, written in 1879, was Ibsen’s first foray into creating a sensation, soon to become his trademark. His subsequent Ghosts (1881) and Hedda Gabler (1890), among others, were scandals in their day, often even banned for periods of time, though now his canon is widely …show more content…

The play closes with “The heavy sound of a door being slammed is heard from below” (86), the ‘door-slam heard ‘round the world.’ In Hedda Gabler, however, Hedda’s marriage is strained from the start. She has married Tesman “for kicks and giggles,” as it were; it is doubtful whether she ever loved him (or even pretended to) at all. She is high-class, extravagant, and feels as if the world were beneath her. She is intelligent, sexually and physically charged, and does not wish to accept the role she has been placed into by society. It is no secret that her marriage with Tesman is forced, artificial even. Their dialogue is very forced from the start, she is quite flippant with him, and she orders him around as if he were the housewife instead of her. She wishes extravagant, lavish parties from his money, which she later comes to find are an impossibility with his current financial state, and she seems to be bored very easily, both by Tesman and life itself. She encourages former flame Ejlert Lovborg to kill himself “beautifully,” but when she realizes even this seemingly simple act has gone awry, and that his death was actually accidental and ugly in nature, she sees no purpose left for her. When she has lost control over the one and only thing she had control over, she exits and shoots herself in the temple. In A Doll House, the conflict is individual versus society. Nora is at odds with her place in society, her role as a woman. She has saved

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