A Doll House By Henrik Ibsen Essay

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Henrik Ibsen, a Norwegian playwright, can be described as a social revolutionary with the Doll’s House maintaining a high degree of relevancy years after its publication. Crossing clear-cut definitions of gender roles, the play goes beyond its time in 19th century Norway. A Doll’s House tackles the roles of women, ego, and a misogynistic society. While life functions on an emotional and physical continuum, no single definition expresses life as black and white, the same occurring within the play. Going through a spectrum of different ideologies, the Doll’s House is neither singularly humanist nor feminist at its lonesome. That being the case, a core of feminism with outer layers of humanistic ideals convey the focal meaning of self- liberation through a dismissal of conventional …show more content…

Joan Templeton’s afterword to the Signet Classics edition of Ibsen: Four Major Plays Volume I reviews multiple defenders of Ibsen, who claim the play is not a representation of feminism, but a depiction of a human achieving equality and self-liberation because of her humanity, not her gender. Yet because of Nora’s female gender, she lacks an education, training, and real world experience. As a female, she is treated as a child wife that exists to please her father and husband. With every conversation involving Nora and Torvald, he speaks to her as if she were a child incapable of understanding anything with a minimal amount of depth. Referring to her with names such as “my lark”, “my songbird”, and “my little squirrel”, Torvald minimizes her as a person and a woman, “There, there! My little singing bird mustn’t go drooping her wings, eh? Has it got the sulks, that little squirrel of mine?” Even more, larks and songbirds are kept as pets in different cultures around the world,

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