How Does Nora Change In A Doll's House By Henrik Ibsen

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In the play, A Doll 's House by Henrik Ibsen, the main character Nora remains the same naive and childlike person through out most of the play. While on the inside dealing with a war waging, a war against what she thought she knew of the world and how it actually is. Her conflict builds up, until finally she can 't contain it and it starts boiling over. This helps set up the ending, in such a way that its overwhelming powerful and self reflecting that she 's unable to return to how things once were.

In the beginning of the play, everything seems perfect. She has three beautiful children who she absolutely adores, and her darling husband is getting a promotion at work. You see little of what Nora has to deal with. However, this soon changes.
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So it 's no surprise when Krogstad demands that she help him keep his job at the bank. She in turn goes to Torvald and asks him to let Krogstad keep his job. This leads to Torvald telling Nora that Krogstad is morally broken and has no compass pointing north. That due to his faults, wrongdoings, his lies and trickery, his children will be raised to be the same and that they 'll be poisoned for his wrongdoings. This is the point in the play when Nora begins to question everything she once thought she knew. She started to wonder if her children would have the same fate due to her faults? Her wrongdoings? This leaves her feeling extremely distraught and …show more content…
He finally learned of what she 'd done and he was furious and disgusted. He told her she wasn 't allowed to raise the children that she 'd poison them and claimed that he 'd do anything to keep the morally broken Krogstand from telling others of his foolish wife 's sins. His cowardliness left Nora feeling distraught, because not once did she ever question her husband 's courage, love, and loyalty. This is the climax of the story, because this is when Nora realizes they 'd both been living a lie, with fake smiles and pretty words. They 've both been struggling with their own things for so long, and only now did the curtains finally fall.

Her questioning and internal struggling leads to the ending of the play. Where she finally realizes her marriage and her childhood, was all a show. An act put on by the puppet master, she had only been a doll in a dollhouse following the stript and playwright. Her struggling and questioning wasn 't a bad thing, because without it she would never have realized the truth. Without her questioning and hard trials, this play wouldn 't have left such an impact on the society as it

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