Nora Helmer and Women
Nora Helmer and Women in American LiteratureWomen were valued very little by nineteenth century society. The treatment of these women was also extremely negative; they were expected to stay home and fulfill domestic duties. Literature of this time embodies and mirrors social issues of women in society. Henrik Ibsen uses Nora Helmer in A Doll House to portray the negative treatment of all women throughout society during the nineteenth century. Many women characters throughout American literature reflect the same conflicts and attitudes of Nora in Ibsen's play A Doll House. The role of a woman was inferior to that of a man, especially in marriages. The main duties of a woman were centered around the home. They were expected to fulfill their domestic duties, such as caring for the children, cooking washing, and cleaning the household. She had the responsibilities of dealing with a household and she almost always had children to care for, which required strength and knowledge; however, being able too fulfill marital duties and satisfying her husband brought satisfaction to some married women. In the play A Doll House, Nora too finds happiness in keeping her husband pleased. She always 'play-acts' for Torvald, and she enjoy
James, her husband, then replies, ". she discovered how few among [women] were more than household drudges, the servants of their families, worked to the verge of exhaustion, and neither thanked or rewarded for their pains" (Cooke 472). come here so I can show you everything I bought. She feels that she has to liberate herself from all the simple roles that she has been assigned to. assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression. Despite the many oppressions in a masculine society forced upon them, the women were willing and able to rise above them. She basically oversees Anne-Marie, who is the children's nurse, in caring for the three small children; she is also responsible for doing household shopping as suggested in these lines: . And here I have dress material and handkerchiefs for the maids. (Ibsen 784) This proves that Nora does have responsibilities in her home, and she is capable of effectively caring for the members of her family.
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