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Social Limitations In Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler

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Hedda Gabler is a strong independent women who has been forced to live her life as a common woman. She is a woman who has come to grow bored of her new life as a wife, to a man whom she does not truly love. This short story shows its readers the social limitations that are imposed on women during the nineteenth-century, and how one women dreams of escaping this way of life in which makes her feel like a hostage in her world. Hedda 's difficulties of having a husband who cannot fulfill her needs of freedom and a good social life. Following with, being stuck in a house as a newlywed refusing to admit that she is with child. Then, thriving through another woman 's life as she has began to separate from her uneventful life. Finally, ending by taking her life by the hands, Hedda is desperate for a way out. Hedda Gabler is a young newlywed who thrives in overpowering others in her life to save herself from her own unhappy struggles, Ibsen Used this character in a masculine way, to send a message to society that perhaps women can be more than a simple house wife. As the story begins with Tesman and Hedda returning from their honeymoon, it is obvious to the reader that Tesman talks so highly. He states, "Yes, but have you noticed how she 's blossomed, how well she 's filled out on our trip?"(page 660) It is natural for the readers to assume Hedda is pregnant, but she does not respond to these complements as a normal woman of this time would. Hedda replies to her husband by saying,

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