Hedda Gabler Essay

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“I had positively danced myself tired, my dear Judge. My day was done—Oh reasons—and George Tesman after all, you must admit that he is correctness itself.” (Ibsen 27-28) In Act two of Hedda Gabler, Hedda reveals her intentions for marrying George. This conversation between Hedda and Judge Brack exposes the intimacy between Hedda and Brack, and the lack there of between Hedda and her husband George. While Hedda Gabler and George Tesman are married, they are not in a relationship. The use of Hedda’s maiden name through Henrik Ibsen;s play, Hedda Gabler, accentuates the aristocratic distance between the couple by illustrating Hedda’s progress through her path to self-realization.
The Jungian path to self-realization is the process of discovering one’s individual personality traits. These personality traits are separated into five separate parts called the shadow, anima/animus, persona, ego, and self. The shadow of oneself is the animalistic instincts inherent in the human personality. This part of our unconscious self contains the less favorable parts of each human being. The anima or animus balances the masculine and feminine characteristics in each human being. The anima is given the feminine, maternal characteristics in every man, and the animus is the masculine, …show more content…

Hedda says, “Good morning, dear Miss Tesman! So early a call! That is kind of you.” This first encounter presents Hedda’s struggle to keep her aristocratic background an ongoing part of her present life. Hedda’s sarcasm here shows her societal class difference from Aunt Julia and her annoyance with being woken up too early. This encounter portrays Hedda’s struggle between her shadow and her persona. Hedda’s shadow is her yearning for power and the struggle of her marriage to someone in a lower class, while her persona exhibits a kind, friendly

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