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- The events begin to succeed each other more and more rapidly and the ‘circle’
- begins to spin around her. We find that, for saving her husband’s life, Nora has
- committed forgery and Krogstad is ready to use this information in order achieve his goals :
- ’’(…)if I produce this document in court, you’ll be condemned’’.(791)
- This element gives us a hint of women condition in a deeply- rooted man thought
- society .
- In addition, Dr. Rank, who had a lethal disease, confesses his love for her :
- ’’ You know now that I’m at your service, body and soul’’.(802)
- All these events make the circle tighten and spin faster around Nora, who can hardly
- resist to this pressure and seeks the relief in wildly dancing the ‘tarantella’, a dance
- wich she transforms into a ‘ life and death’ one. This dance can also be viewed as an
- one of the key element that permits us to say that she’s passing from a state of
- passive victim to a n early state of active agent :
- ’’ Nora dances more and more widly. Helmer stands by the stove giving her repeated directions as she dances ; she does not seem to hear them. ’’.(808)
- All the other characters’reactions, words and attitudes form the chain wich
- unbearably surrounds Nora and wich she will finally break, liberating herself from
- the lie she has been living in for many years-she firmly tells Helmer her decision :
- ’’ I can’t stay here with you any longer (...). I’m leaving here at once’’.(821)
- In addition to this intimate inter-independence between Nora and the other four
- important characters (viewed as a whole), is the complexity of Helmer’s wife as a
- dramatic personage.Compared to the others, Nora is the most ‘ round’ character, one
- who we see evolving, in contrast with Helmer or Dr. Rank. More precisely, we
- discover two forms of evolution of this personage :
- 1.an ‘external’ one, produced in the reader’s mind, as he discovers the purpose of her always asking money to the husband and having a ‘toy attitude’ with him ;
- 2. and the second evolution, more profound, wich implies the inner transformation of the character, tired of representing someone’s toy and desiring independence.
- The beginning of the play presents us a ‘squirrel-like’(775)woman, always wanting to
- please her husband in order to get money from him. She voluntarily accepts Helmer
- comparing her with a little animal and even seems to identify with this image :
- ’’ Ah, if you only knew how many expenses the likes us sky-larks and
- squirrels have, Torvald’’(777).
- Nora appears completely submitted to her husband, ready to accept whatever he would
- say or do :
- ’’ I would never dream of doing anything you didn’t want me to.’’(777)
- in order to satisfy her ( apparent) only preoccupation :
- ’’ You could always give me money, Torvald’’. (776)
- The fog and confusion wich surrounded her and her attitude begin gradually to
- disappear as we find out that she had borrowed money to save Helmer’s life and she
- saves almost every penny her husband gives her in order topay the debt off. This stage
- of Nora’s ‘external’ evolution enables us to see a woman who deeply loves her
- husband, but who is not strong enough to fight against his prejudices :
- ’’ Torvald is a man with a great deal of pride- it would be terribly embarrassing and humiliating for him if he thought he owed anything to me’’.(782)
- Moreover, she prefers fancying about a rich man who would give her the money she
- needs( a psychological escape from the constraints she lives in) than facing her
- husband.
- The two evolutions begin to coincide from the moment when Krogstad threatens Nora
- with telling Helmer that she has committed forgery. We ‘feel’ that something begins to
- change when contradictory feelings ‘invade’ her- love for the children, for the
- husband, and the desire to commit suicide :
- ’’(…) never see the children again(…)Oh, that black icy water.Oh, that bottomless… !(817)
- On the other hand, she would do almost anything in order to regain her old
- lifestyle(that of a ‘doll’who passed from the father’s hands into that of the husband’s).
- The transformation seems to end with the firm decision to throw herself into the water
- after Helmer would have found out the hidden truth :
- ’’Now you must read your letters, Torvald’’.(816)
- But it willnot come to an end until Nora really ‘discovers’ her husband :
- ’’ Miserable woman… what is this you have done ?(…)Do you understand what you have done ?’’(817)
- contrasting with his reaction after finding that Krogstad has sent them back the ‘IOU’ :
- ’’ Helmer :I am saved ! Nora, I am saved !
- Nora : And me ?
- Helmer : You too, of course… ’’.(818)
- From this moment, we assist to an incredible change from the submitted wife to the
- firm, decided Nora, who has the courage to leave her husband and children in quest of
- independence.
- Having dealt with the analyze of Nora and Mrs Linde’s attitudes and their relations
- with the other personages, we now turn to the author’s ‘relation’with his main
- characters :‘women’.
- Being a drama, ‘A Doll’s House’ has only the diialogues and the characters’ actions to
- reveal their emotions to the reader. Therefore Ibsen places Nora for the most part of
- the play in the center of the action ( she appears in all scenes except for the discussion
- between Krogstad and Mrs Linde) and eliminates any dialogue or event that would not
- have conributed to her evolution from passive vistim to active agent of her life, and
- would not have been an argument for his thesis.
- We have the conviction that Nora not only represents a forrm of protest against
- women’s very limited rights in the 19th Century :
- ’’Helmer : But nobody sacrifies his honor for the one she loves
- Nora : Hundreds and thousands of women have’’.(823),
- but also becomes an ‘instrument’ in Ibsen’s hands, an ‘instrument’ for pleading in
- favor of personal freedom and individuals’ liberty to choose their destiny in becoming
- a social responsible agent.
- The materialization of this idea, in terms of liberation of the main character ( women), comes
- naturally after we have discovered the constraints surrounding Nora, especially coming from
- her husband
- ’’ I wouldn’t find a woman doubly attractive for being so obviously
- helpless.(…) It’s as though it made her his property in a double sense : he has, as it
- were, given her a new life, and she becomes in a way both his wife and at tha same
- time his child’’.(823)
- For having demonstrated that Women in Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House ‘ were very
- consistent and complex characters of the play and that they become the weapon that
- Ibsen uses for expressing his convictions, I clearly hope having achieved the goal of
- this paper.That is to point out that Nora and Mrs Linde both experienced an evolution
- from passive victims in a life devoid of any rights for them to active agents in a life
- somewhat difficult for the adversities that a woman, who wants to claim her rights to
- live her life as she think best, has to face .
- Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’ is in some extent an hymn for sexual equality that Society
- should one day achieve.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br> :
- · Ibsen, Henrik. ‘A Doll’s House’. Literature for Composition.Ed. Sylvan Barnet 5th ed. New York : Longman, 2000.774-824.
- <br><br>
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