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A Doll’s House: 林怡平 Joy LIN 9542007.  A Doll’s House questions the social doctrine of being men and women:  Ibsen’s contemporaries:

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Presentation on theme: "A Doll’s House: 林怡平 Joy LIN 9542007.  A Doll’s House questions the social doctrine of being men and women:  Ibsen’s contemporaries:"— Presentation transcript:

1 A Doll’s House: 林怡平 Joy LIN 9542007

2  A Doll’s House questions the social doctrine of being men and women:  Ibsen’s contemporaries:

3  The seemingly fragile doll-wife 1. Secretly saves her husband’s life 2. Pays the debt by years of work  A submissive creature, but someone other than men’s little women.  The “masculine” provider and protector: “It was almost like being a man.”

4  A dominator with “all his masculine pride” 1. Pushes Nora away 2. Defines himself as a victim  Failing to be the shelter, Trovald violates the notion of chivalry.  A frail-minded “feminine” receiver

5 1. Fantasy of his chivalry falls apart 2. Delusion of their mutual love 3. Trovald’s true character: Selfishness—Women to live/sacrifice for love.  Painful self-consciousness  Overthrows patriarchy’s socialization of females as serving items:  No longer an object, but a subject. No longer a doll in the house.

6  A Doll’s House is not merely play of feminism.  Ibsen states on the Norwegian Women’s Rights League: “[T]rue enough, it is desirable to solve the woman problem, along with all the others; but that has not been the whole purpose. My task has been the description of humanity.”

7  The protagonist’s identity broadens: Nora is a woman and “first and foremost a human being.”  Emphasis on individuality:  A universal subject: Voice for the repressed, the unheard and the marginalized. the fixed roles— the function as a daughter, a wife, a mother, a doll An individual with independent mind— Nora

8  Finney Gail. “Ibsen and Feminism.” The Cambridge Companion to Ibsen. Ed, James McFarlane. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994. 89-105.  Gray, Ronald. “A Doll’s House.” Ibsen—A Dissenting View. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977. 41-58.

9  Moi, Toril. “First and Froemost a Human Being.” Henrik Ibsen and the Birth of Modernism: Art, Theater, Philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. 225-247.  Saari, Sandra. “Female Become Human: Nora Transformed.” Contemporary Approaches to Ibsen Vol. VI. Eds. Bjorn Hemmer and Vigdis Ystad. Oslo: Norwegian University Press, 1988. 41-55.

10  Templeton, Joan. “The poetry of feminism” Ibsen’s Women. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. 110-145.


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