How Is Nora Justified In A Doll's House

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In the nineteenth century, it was normal for the husband to have a job and the wife to stay home and wait on her husband. A woman would make sure they looked a certain way and kept the home a certain way. In A Doll’s House, Torvald treats Nora the way most husbands did in the nineteenth century. Torvald treats his wife like a doll, or toy. He criticizes Nora and is only worried about his appearances and not his wife’s feelings. At the end of the play, Nora makes the bold decision to leave Torvald and her children. In A Doll’s House, Nora makes the right decision when she goes against societal norms and leaves Torvald because of the circumstances and the way he treats her.

The first reason why Nora is justified in leaving Torvald is because he treats her like a doll. Torvald expects Nora to do whatever he says. He forbade her from eating macaroons so her teeth wouldn’t rot because he wants her to look a certain way. He wants her to keep the house decorated in a specific way. Whenever Nora does or says something Torvald doesn’t approve of, he makes sure to fix it. When Nora lies about who has been to the house, …show more content…

Torvald makes sure Nora knows that he is in control and that he can do things better than she can. After finding out that she did something illegal to save his life, he replies with, “Now you’ve wrecked all my happiness- ruined my whole future,” (Ibsen 935). Instead of being grateful that she saved his life, he worries about what other people will think when they find out. He becomes so angry and lectures her with, “But you can’t be allowed to bring up the children; I don’t dare trust you with them,” (Ibsen 935). Instead of working with his wife to solve the issue, Torvald blames Nora for everything. Torvald has done wrong himself, yet Nora is the hypocrite, liar, and

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