The Role Of Women In A Doll's House And The Revolver

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In the 19th century the middle class of the European culture came from a result of the industrial revolution. It’s emergence first appeared during the late middle ages, with the birth of stronger armies, more diplomacy, endowments that could convert money into power. The strength of power throughout the country came from men, while the wives and women in general took a backseat as the men were the financial, social, and vocal anchors of the European society. The women’s issue related in A Doll’s House and The Revolver, were all common issues women faced their entire life in the bourgeois culture. Although in today’s culture women have rights, the bourgeois culture of the 19th century saw a rise in a feminist movement to increase independence …show more content…

During those last two decades of the 19th century, the movement of independence fostered a generation of women that had questioned the patriarchal authority in which they sought equal property rights as well as the right to vote. The feminist intent that Ibsen used in A Doll’s House, was Nora rejection of her domestic dependency which at the time was a growing awareness among women at the time, by no longer being in a unequal marriage and seeks an independent life (1118). The psychological effects that both women faced in A Doll’s House and The Revolver, could of had a detrimental effect on both women from what they both experienced being married at very young ages and having jealous husbands. You have Flora who was threatened by her husband “ Flora, I may be a madman, but I am not a fool. I have alienated your love, and although perhaps you would not have thought of deceiving me, but because unfortunately, I love you more each day, and love you without peace, with eagerness and fever” (1123). After that statement he proceeds to show her a large revolver. In A Doll’s House Helmer tells Nora “ when I watched you swaying and whirling in the tarantella my blood boiled I could endure it no longer; and that’s why I made you come home with me so early” (1106), which he symbolized the man of that time with the actions he portrayed. Just like the women of the bourgeois culture, both characters faced opposition, from slave like husbands, psychological hurdles, they overcame by establishing their independence as married women, getting the unfair treatment out of their life, and combatting their husbands overpowering control of their

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