Freedom in "Hedda Gabler"

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One of the many social issues dealt with in Ibsen's predicament plays is the lack of freedom bestowed upon women limiting them to a domestic life. In Hedda Gabler, Hedda struggles with an independent intellect and satisfying her ambitions in the slender role society allows her. Incapable of being creative the way she wants, Hedda's passions become destructive to herself and others around her.

With a father that is a general, Hedda is more of a leader than an ordinary housewife. She manipulates her husband George due to the fact she is unable to have the authority she craves. She tells Thea, "I want the power to shape a man's destiny." Just the mention of her pregnancy displays impatientness and evasiveness because of her unsuitability for a domestic role. She tells Judge Brack, "I've had no leanings in that direction." This seems to point out her unwillingness to accept the burdens of motherhood. More than anything Hedda desires intellectual creativity, not just the sexual power that keeps her in a limited social function. Since her only way of displaying this power is through a "credulous" husband, Hedda is jealous of Thea's intellectual partnership with Eilert Loevborg, which produces their creative "child."

Hedda's use of her father's pistols symbolizes both her entrapment and release. On one hand the pistol she gives to Eilert ultimately finds Hedda in an "unthinkable scandal", which in its own way displays the added burden or control Judge Brack has over her now. The other pistol shapes her freedom by enabling her to make restitution to herself and forever be free. Her overall relationship with Thea is complicated by the fact that Hedda lacks Thea's courage to leave her husband and risk being cast out. Her marriage to ...

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...te their lives to compiling Eilerts manuscript from notes, and Thea hoping to inspire George as she did Eilert. After all remaining limited power Hedda had disappears; Hedda acknowledges Thea's victory. She plays one last song on the piano and admits defeat, "Not free. Still not free!...From now on I'll be quiet."

Hedda's overall problem is she denied her own freedom in order to have the self-esteem that comes with personal achievement. Her attempts to retain her independence within a society that won't let her and through the fear of scandal, prevents her from marry a man with whom she might have both a mutually supportive and individually satisfying relationship. The only freedom she displays throughout the play comes in the end where her power is the strongest, with herself. Taking her own life she has taken the coward's road out, but shown her ultimate freedom.

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