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    Page 42 of 50 - About 500 Essays
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    Nora Macaroon

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    father. Many years after getting married and having kids, her husband has obtained characteristics of her father. After years of trying to sustain her “flawless marriage”, she finally has the boldness to walk away from her toxic relationship. Her reasons for leaving are undoubtedly rational. Firstly, the dominance Nora experiences from Torvald can be depicted throughout the beginning of the play. Nora is put in a rugged position when she has to choose between her macaroon…

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    Even though it is hard to undertake a mission, there are always many motivations that drive people to undertake a mission.For example, Farah Ahmedi was determined to survive so she climbs up a mountain and thought about the good life she can get after this. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi was a young mongoose who could kill snakes and make himself proud. Aengus didn't give up looking for someone who he only met once and decided to fall in love with her. Farah Ahmedi had the determination to survive,…

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    To have a name which lights at least a little tiny spark of interest from almost every human being on Earth, is a talent that not many people have much claim to. If he was still alive, there is barely any doubt that Napoleon Bonaparte would be very proud. Bonaparte, who died close to two hundred years ago, still seems to be in the land of the living. This man changed the course of history, shaping the world into what it is today. All of this may sound as though he were some kind of priest, but…

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    What Makes Hedda Powerful

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    Hedda was extremely trapped by the society she was living in, and had been in part since her birth. As the general’s daughter, growing up, the public eye was always upon her, and she “always had so many admirers” (Ibsen 225). Not only was she a public figure, but Hedda was also a woman who had a hunger for an “intensity of life which life almost never provides” (Marowitz). Hedda simply wasn’t a typical woman for her time, which trapped her more. With Hedda always being in the spotlight growing…

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    like hers. She was raised being called a doll and treated like a doll her entire life and that is all she ever knew. So basically, Nora only payed attention to her children when she wanted to and when she was done she put them to the side. “But our house has been nothing but a play-room. Here I have been your doll-wife, just as at home I used to be papa's doll-child. And the children, in their turn, have been my dolls. I thought it fun when you played with me, just as the children did when I…

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    I found Brunelleschi's design of the dome for Florence's cathedral to be a fascinating topic on scientific discovery. I also chose this topic because several years ago I watched a documentary that showed the construction of a one-fifth scale model of Brunelleschi’s dome and the possible construction methods that he may have used. The story begins in Florence, Italy in the year 1296 when the fathers of the city had decided to build a church to “showcase the status of Florence as one of Europe’s…

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    Torvald Helmer

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    In the play, “A Doll House”, by Henrik Ibsen, Torvald Helmer is a condescending, hypocritical, childish middle aged man. As a lawyer and newly promoted bank manager, Torvald lives in a middle class family with his wife Nora and their three small children which he spends little time with. He is shown to be overtly petty, excessively conscious of what others think of him, and is keen up keeping appearances. When Torvald finds out that Nora borrowed money he reacts poorly, causing his marriage to…

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    Though Queen Margaret was clearly a powerful and influential Queen, Shakespeare dismissed her political accomplishments. In Richard III, the playwright only mentions to her actual involvement in the War of Roses once, referring to when Margaret took a cloth drenched in Rutland's blood and waved it in front of Richard Plantagenet's face: “The curse my noble father laid on thee, / When thou didst crown his warlike brows with paper / And with thy scorns drew'st rivers from his eyes, / And then, to…

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    In A Doll’s House, Krogstad was the character that was very similar to Iago as he was first viewed as the plays antagonist too. Krogstad is first introduced as a co-worker of Torvald in the plays beginning. Torvald, Nora’s husband, had just recently obtained a new position at the bank in which would allow them to live a more comfortable life. When Krogstad learns that he will be fired from the bank, he attempts to use Nora and the power of blackmail to prevent Torvald from firing him. Doing his…

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    A Doll's House Metaphors

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    A Doll’s House Essay A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, is of the best-known plays that displays modern and realistic prose drama. The play demonstrates a bold exposition of the hypocrisy and the struggle within a seemingly happy marriage. Appearances and reality, as well as betrayal and deception, are key discussions from A Doll’s House. Throughout the book, Ibsen used metaphors for crafting, plot sequences, and character blocking for emphasis of the themes. The chasm between appearances and…

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