Theme Of Repression In A Doll's House

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In Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” the main character is a woman who has been controlled and conformed to the norms of society. Louise Mallard has apparently given her entire life to assuring her husband’s happiness while forfeiting her own. This truth is also apparent in Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House. In this story, Nora Helmer has given her life to a man who has very little concern for her feelings or beliefs. Both of these characters live very lonely lives, and both have a desire to find out who they really are and also what they are capable of becoming.
Both Nora and Mrs. Mallard’ lives have been shaped and molded to conform to their husbands wishes. At the time these stories took place, it was basically unheard of for women to assert their beliefs or to act upon their ideas. Nora and Mrs. Mallard responsibilities were to be wives and homemakers it was the husband’s job to run things. In the nineteenth century the women were primarily a reflection of their husbands. Women were never truly free to do things for themselves.
In the short story of an Hour, Chopin describes Mrs. Mallard as a beautiful example of a repressed woman, “She was young, with a fair, calm face, whose lines bespoke repression and even a …show more content…

The mailbox, to which Tovald holds the only key, literally holds Nora fate within it. When Krogstad writes a letter to Tovald exampling the loan he had given to Nora and the fraud signature she has done. Since Tovald is the only person with the keys that shows how much control he as over Nora. Another Significant symbol is the title itself. Nora feels as though she has been treated like a doll by both Tovald and her father. By being used to entertain and to look pretty when it suited them. She also feels as though she has treated her own children like dolls, she plays with to make herself

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