A Doll's House Character Analysis Essay

837 Words2 Pages

Born in Norway during 1828, Henrik Ibsen became disenchanted with Norwegian traditional societal ideals, turning to theater to advocate social and moral reforms. In his drama “A Doll House,” Nora Helmer reflects the contrary nature of those traditional ideals and his own pressure to amend them. Initially, Nora seems to be the ideal woman of the nineteenth century standard. Trained from her youth to submit to the head of the house, she blithely allows her husband to take full control of marital matters, from clothing to friends to serious financial issues. Yet through the course of the drama, Nora’s true character emerges as she reveals her moral values, her devotion to her children, and her newfound desire for a self-reliant life. Like a flighty bird, Nora is caught in an internal battle between pleasing her husband and simultaneously disobeying him. From the beginning of the story, Nora is …show more content…

For much of Act 1, she dotes on her children, dancing, playing, and laughing with them when they arrive home with their nurse. She even goes so far as to dismiss the nurse in order to spend more time with her children, saying “No, don’t bother Anne-Marie—I’ll undress them myself. Oh yes, let me. It’s such fun. Go in and rest; you look half frozen” (1202). Yet by the finale of Act 1, she ceases to play with her children and refuses to let them near her out of that same love. As Daniel J. Brooks states, “Nora separates herself from her children because she fears she is infecting them with moral sickness every minute she is with them. Both her husband and Dr. Rank have inadvertently revealed to her that because she, like Krogstad, has committed a forgery, her diseased character will infect her children.” From that moment onward, Nora transforms into an entirely different type of devoted mother, instead fearfully seeking to protect her children from

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