through the meaning created by the stage directions and setting of the stage. The playwright reveals the stage as an extension of society and as the drama unfolds, the audience is aware of the role deception plays in the rigid class structure of the Victorian Era. The play’s title foreshadows the symbolic importance of the stage. As the audience is introduced to the living room of the Helmers’ home, it becomes apparent that it is a metaphorical…
Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll House, has done an excellent job in creating an environment of a household in the Victorian Era. He gives Nora, the main character, many influences to her numerous actions throughout the play, but Ibsen wants to portray Krogstad as the most influential character because of his actions and strong motives inspiring Nora to commit crimes, as well as confidence and forgiveness. Nora is hiding many secrets from her husband, Torvald, but her biggest secret is the fact that when…
clear. He proposes to the honorable lady Gwendolyn Fairfax and, through leading a double life, ultimately demonstrates his conformity to the Victorian ethical and social standards. Jack, same as other main characters in Wilde 's play, is a less realistic character and more of an instrument to highlighting a set of ideas and attitudes. As a known upper-class Victorian, Jack became respected by the society only because of his adopted father 's fortune this made him familiar about all the rules of…
content, and sophisticated use of language in her poetry provides insight into why her poems are both engaging and highly valued. Rossetti’s works are highly acclaimed by many modern critics as innovative for her time, due to her commentary on Victorian society and her lyrical gift. She explores many thematic concerns that maintain relevancy in present-day society, including the corrupting influences of the world; the inconstancy of romantic love; and the exploitation and objectification of…
This poem is also influenced by Victorian morality. In one stanza Symons writes, “the mirror that has sucked your face / […] / and there mysteriously keeps / forgotten memories of grace” (lines 5-8). Here the lover is no longer a pure, perfect figure. She was one graceful and perfect and now she is only an empty mirror image of herself, she has none of the same substance she once did. The opinion of an unchaste woman as graceless is characteristically Victorian. Wilde’s male speaker also places…
during Economic Prosperity and Religious Controversy. Unlike other novels where the theme is revolved around love, romance and fairy-tale with grand mythical creatures. Dickens was writing about the social experience of the first generation of the Victorian age he outlines social injustice, child poverty and lack of education. Great Expectation is a bildungsroman where Dickens writes about the life of pip from an infant age to adulthood. when the readers first meet Pip they instantly realise…
Industrial Revolution in England, where women received pay compared to their male counterparts solely based on gender. The rulers at the time, during the Victorian Era, did nothing to prevent these issues, which is why today they still persist. In the view of the author of Great Expectations, Charles Dickens, there were many more problems with the Victorian Era in England. One of the problems was many people had “expectations” at the time, and to expose this issue, Dickens wrote a novel about a…
influence on the outcome of the story. The main themes in a story are a reflection of the social class and the beliefs of the society that the author lived in when writing it. Robert Louis Stevenson explores the idea of the duality of mankind, ethics and morality in his novella The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Stevenson explores the idea of the internal struggle every man has between good and evil and the inclination man has for immoral behaviour. It also conveys to the readers the…
Victorian society was characterized by the strict norms imposed upon its populace. All were expected to adhere to their designated societal role – men the workers, women the caregivers. In A Doll’s House, Henrik Ibsen probes the problems of the roles assigned to women in a male-oriented society. For women, their sharply defined roles did not allow for individuality, forcing them to sacrifice their identity in order to fit into society. A Doll’s House assess the dichotomy between who women are…
mentions about England's Victorian Era, its social values, classes, roles of genders and one of the most important samples of Romanticism movement written in 1847 by Charlotte Bronté. Even though it has history over a century, it still protects popularity and its theatre, musical, movie, novel and child book versions are still being published. The author's perfect wording about the themes such as marriage, education, love and equality, social classes, appearances, morality and ethics has a huge…