The Boarding House

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    A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen is a three act play in which one of the main characters, Nora, frees her true self from the person she is pretending to be for her husband. Ibsen is known for his plays because they allow characters to break free of the roles set by society and live for themselves instead. A Doll’s House was one of Ibsen’s first plays and would cause people to question the roles of women in marriages and the idea of marriage not being for life. Ibsen did this by giving readers a…

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    Louisa May Alcott was an amazing women. Her life was full of every obstacle a person could think of but yet she still was able to get over each and every one of them. From being a women to being extremely impoverished, she overcame them all. Not only did she overcome them but she made something great out of them , Little Women. Even though I have never read this book , reading about Louisa’s life make me want to spend some time reading it. She portrayed her life and everything that made Louisa ,…

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    Bryan Burrough was previously a writer for the Wall Street Journal, and won three John Handcock Awards in financial journalism. As an author he wrote six bestselling books before The Big Rich, including Days of Rage and Public Enemies. Burroughs grew up around the families of the Big Rich and was amazed by them. He wrote The Big Rich in response to the lack of knowledge about the families who were once considered Texas nobility. The book focuses around the lives the Big Rich, Roy Cullen, Sid…

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    The question of whether it is better that you feared or loved is very interesting and many people have their own opinions on this matter. One of the people who analyzed this question was Niccolo Machiavelli – one of the most famous Italian thinkers and political leaders of the Renaissance period. When the Medici family gained power in Florence, during the Italian Renaissance, Machiavelli, who was back then a civil servant in the Florentine Republic - was accused of conspiracy and imprisoned. To…

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    Men are superior to women. This controversial statement forms the basis of Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, an 1879 play characterizing the journey of self-discovery, self-identity and a search for independence and freedom. The main character Nora struggles to free herself from the strict societal norms and a masculine-dominated household (Al Suhaibani 16). The story is contextualized in the 19th century when societal norms about marriage and familial relationships were litigious. Furthermore,…

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    Analysis of Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, a realistic drama, exemplifies not only the chauvinism most prevalent during the late 1800s, but also the notion of humanity’s problems as a whole. Dramas, like poetry and fiction, utilize literary elements that allow it to resonate with its readers while eclipsing simple storytelling. In A Doll’s House, Ibsen uses characterization, symbolism, and setting to immerse the reader into his world and unravel the corruption that hides…

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    Societal norms can be a brutal dictator. Throughout “A Doll’s House,” the audience sees how societal normalities are not necessarily a good thing. In this play, written by Henrik Ibsen in the 1870s, the ideas of gender roles, reputations and love are explored artfully. The play follows the lives of Nora and Torvald Helmer, as well as several of their friends and acquaintances: an old doctor, a young widow in need of a job, a bank employee, and a nursemaid. Torvald treats his wife, Nora, as a…

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    own business and bought her freedom by her herself. Keckley became well known because of her skills in dressmaking, and it landed her in the white house and that was how she started making the first lady’s dresses and became close with Mary Lincoln. Not only did Keckley talk about her life in her autobiography, she also talks mostly about the white house and the Lincoln’s family most especially, Mary Lincoln. Elizabeth Keckley wrote her autobiography, “Behind the…

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    work for: An Analysis of Kristine's Heroism in Ibsen's A Doll's House “I must have work or I can’t bear to live...” (Ibsen 33) In Henrik Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House, Mrs. Kristine Linde emerges as an empowering and self-sufficient hero by challenging societal and familial roles in 19th century Norway. Kristine did not necessarily follow societal expectations as she was looking for work and had nobody to care for. In A Doll’s House, Kristine searches for a “purpose in life” by looking for a job…

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    In A Doll’s House Ibsen uses the doll metaphor to develop the theme of entrapment and by extension to illuminate the social backdrop of the time period that gives rise to the many issues and conflicts between the characters in the play. Nora serves as a wife and mother, but not as an equal to Torvald; rather a majority of the protagonist’s stage time is spent as a doll: a weak obedient character with little individuality, her existence a compound of societal norms and the expectations of others,…

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