Masculinity In A Doll's House Essay

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During the Victorian era, playwright Henrik Ibsen created the problem play, A Doll’s House, to reflect the patriarchal system of marriage expected in the upper middle class of his society. The play revolves around the married couple of Nora and Torvald, who’s marriage begins within the patriarchal social standards. The rising action in the play progresses when Nora’s actions challenge the social patriarchal system. However, the character of Torvald maintains his patriarchal social standards throughout the play. Torvald represents three redeeming qualities expected in a man during the Victorian era and to some degree is imprinted in our culture today; duty, respectability, and success. The pressure of the Victorian society influenced the character of Torvald’s identity as a masculine man that views his duty as a protector of his family. For a man, marriage sets the stage of masculinity by forming a “…household, to exercise authority over dependents, and to shoulder the …show more content…

They were expected to work through hardships and succeed financially, which reflected the respectability by their peers in society. Being a man, “involved detaching oneself from the home and its feminine comforts and achieving a level of material success in the wider world (Ranum, pg 242)” The character, Torvald, reflects the societal beliefs of success through his hard work and education as a lawyer and newly appointed position as a bank manager. He expresses his opinion to Nora, “No debt, no borrowing. There can be no freedom or beauty about a home that depends on borrowing and debt (Ibsen, pg. 757)”. Moveover, he was able to overcome the hardship when he quit his government post due to a lack of advancement without going into debt. Unfortunately, he over worked and became deathly ill, which prompted his wife to secure a loan without his acknowledgment to save his

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