Topic > Nora finally learns - 964

Everyone feels guilty at some point in their life. They may have cheated on a test, broken their brother's iPod, or even told a huge lie and hidden it from their husband for years. In this case, this would refer to Nora Hemler in the play A Doll's House. Nora plays an important role in this play. She has hidden the fact that she forged her father's signature from her husband Torvald and has a large amount of debt to repay to a man named Krogstad. He constantly has to deal with one problem after another throughout the show. In the end, she learns to truly stand up for herself and become the strong, powerful woman she is meant to be. In the play A Doll's House, Nora Helmer faces many trials and tribulations throughout the play. Some people find their soul mate throughout their lives and fall in love, while others think they are in love but don't fully know their soul mate. This statement intertwines perfectly with the reference to Nora Helmer in the play A Doll's House. At the beginning of the play, it is shown how much of a child Nora is to Torvald. “There's a shilling. No, keep the change. (The doorman thanks him and goes out. NORA closes the door. She laughs to herself, taking off her hat and coat. She takes a packet of macaroons from her pocket and eats one or two; then she approaches carefully. (Still humming, she approaches the table on the right.) » (Ibsen 1) It is clear that Nora is portrayed as if she is a little girl who waits slowly and carefully outside Torvald's work room. She makes sure that everything in the house is in order so that Torvald does not start instigating and find fault to blame herself.(Another sentence) “Her husband Torvald scolds her for... middle of paper......now it can really be quoted "A Doll's House". profiles of 300 major literary works and the historical events that influenced them. Joyce Moss and George Wilson vol. 2: From Civil Wars to Frontier Societies (1800-1880). 111-117. Gale Virtual Reference Library. April 2, 2014.Brunnemer, Kristin. "Sexuality in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House." File, Inc. Web Facts. April 2, 2014 Next, Stephanie. "A New World for Women? Stephanie Forward reflects on Nora's dramatic exit from Ibsen's A Doll's House." The English Magazine 19.4 (2009): 24+. Literary Resource Center. Network. April 2, 2014.Ibsen, Henrik. Classic reader of “A Doll's House”. Np Dec. 11, 2003, Web. Feb. 18, 2014Kashdan, Joanne G. "A Doll's House." Masterplots, fourth edition (2010): 1-3. Literary reference center. Network. April 2. 2014.