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    Page 13 of 24 - About 233 Essays
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    Employees have the ability to break or make a company; consequently, a company’s greatest advantage is its personnel. In order to realize success a company must hire quality workers, be organized in such a manner to promote success, and then empower their workforce to employ their skills and creativity to accomplish extraordinary things. Organizational behavior involves the influences impacting how people in organizations act, feel, think, and react to their work, toward each other, and toward…

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    Metrixing the Matrix: A Linguistic Analysis of Intertextuality on the Basis of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and Michael Cunningham’s The Hours Gašper Ilc To all those Mmes Richard Dalloway who have not even been Clarissas 1. Introduction Intertextuality has played a central and controversial role in the development of the postmodernist thought ever since the publication of Kristeva’s seminal works on literary theory. Strongly influenced by structuralist semiotics, Kristeva (1980) extends…

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    emphasized a woman’s obedience to her husband. Ibsen acknowledges the fact that in 19th century life the role of the woman was to take care of the house duties by raising the children and attending to her husband as the protagonist of the play Nora Helmer does. During the play Nora rebels against these cultural norms, she abandons herself from her husband and her children when she finally finds herself as an individual. Throughout the play Nora Helmer’s character presents an inauthentic identity…

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    Henrik Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House is a realistic problem play set in the late 1870s in Norway. It is a story about a typical middle-class family of the time of the play dealing with marriage and gender inequality. In Norway in the 1870s, the women grow up and go straight from living with their parents, to being married to someone who is financially stable. Also, the women did not have any real duties or power other than to please their husbands and have children. The family the play focuses on…

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    In my opinion, Torvald is not an antagonist but a victim. Both of him and Nora are suffered from nineteenth-century societal. In nineteenth-century of Europe, patriarchy was the sole form of the social system. Only males were offered power to dominate the ‘world’. Males could always lead to all levels of society in religion, legal and economic, such as a moral authority. In a family, the father or husband could control all in the house, furnishing or even the family members. Women were the…

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    Themes of the doll’s house A Doll’s House is written by Henrik Ibsen in the year 1898 when he was traveling from Italy, Rome and Amalfi. Ibsen used A Doll’s House as one vehicle for questioning the importance—and the tyranny—of wealth. This play comes from Ibsen’s peak of radical ideasand when they were presented. Was written originally in Ibsen’s mother tongue Norwegian . The play was highly controversial when it was first published and since then it played am important role in Victorian…

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    Madumalai Wild Life Sanctuary Introduction Madumalai! The name in itself spells wilderness to the extent and truly so due to the very fact that it is by far one of the most visited, popular and impressive Wild Life Sanctuary in the entire Southern part of India. Madumalai Wild Life Sanctuary is a must visit in case you are looking to traverse the length and breadth of Southern India terrain where this is exactly situated between the states of Karnataka and Kerela. A visitor’s paradise if…

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    Torvald is shown to be the owner of Nora through his use of pet names as previously mentioned, and he actually does quite a good job of taking care of his “little lark”. Not in an emotional way, by making sure that she’s happy and comfortable, but in a more superficial way concerning her appearance. This is made evident by all his efforts to keep his wife beautiful. He tells her to refrain from eating sweets as they’ll…

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    Comparing how gender is portrayed in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House to the role of women in the 21st century is somewhat of an easy task. Although times have changed tremendously since A Doll's House's time, the way women are treated and expected to behave still have very similar characteristics to today's society. Torvald and Nora Helmer have been married for several years and, on the outside, their marriage seems rather happy. They have 3 kids, a nice home, and a steady income since Torvald…

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    In Henrik Ibsen’s play “A Doll’s House,” Ibsen collectively displays a story of a disintegrating marriage in an unidentified 19th-century Scandinavian town, where a controversy is centered around a character named Nora, and her decision to abandon her husband and children. In the years of when this play was written and performed, there was a complete understanding where most men believed that women were best suited to be mothers and wives, and never to leave the house. Ibsen took this known…

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