A Doll's House Has Often Been Considered a Feminist Play; However That Theory Is Often Challenged
Introduction
Henrik Ibsen is one of the world and history's greatest playwright. His unique piece of works have changed the way of thinking and writing of many authors. He wrote many dramatic stories and a book of poetry. He is the playwright who played most of William Shakespeare works. Although these two writes in a very difficult and ancient language, they still played all the time. Henrik Ibsen was born in 1928. He grew up in a wealthy family, and his parents belonged to a prestigious family background. This was something that he felt proud. When he was 15, he entered the profession of pharmacy to learn in Grimstad. In 1850 he went to Christiania, where he attended the so-called student factory Holt Rock, together with Herman. It was not a very good experience for Henry, as he failed several subjects there. While he was there he worked as a journalist and he wrote his first play.
With help from the state and the propagator, Ibsen moved to Italy. There he lived for 27 years, and he wrote some of his most famous pieces there. Henrik Ibsen returned to Norway in 1891. He continued to write and share his strong opinions, but fewer and fewer because of his health. He had several strokes and it went further and further down to him, until his death in 1906.
Discussion
Nora Helmer is a wife and mother of three children, trying to be the perfect spouse for her husband, Torvald. Her husband is everything to her and she is convinced that his love for her is as strong as her love for him. However, this idyll is broken when it becomes known that Nora is guilty of a serious crime, as she has forged her father's signature to save her husband's life. Nora decides to leave Torvald when he, instead of taking the blame and try to protect her, wants to sacrifice her in order to protect themselves.
The show has a few characters and the most concerned are the main characters; Torvald and Nora. Nora change much through the time of front suspension concerns. She is a relatively young woman, which in many ways is still a small child. She works as a nod doll for her husband, who expects that the way she behaves and the way she represents him and his family will be in accordance with his expectations and requirements. Nora appears to be somewhat naive, as she accepts everything she gets a bit to do. She is exuberant and joyous, as she is convinced that all is as it should be. Her husband is in many ways the centerpiece of her life and she has very high expectations of him, making the fall even more as it becomes clear what Torvald really feel. Nora is shocked when she understands that her husband is willing to sacrifice her well-being, to save his own reputation. She also feels that she ...