Should I believe in the conflict between Antigone's personal ethics and the puppet and the national law? Should I believe in myself? This dilemma is common in many literature. At Antigone and Doll's House, the theme is whether people are the truth to themselves, whether they should be true to the country or society. Do Nora (doll house) and Antigone (Antigone) follow the rules and do the nations and society do what they want to do or should follow their own conscience? Both plays deal with personal ethics and domestic law, obedience and dispute, understand the conflict between them. Antigon
Responsibility of Antigone and Individual It is not the responsibility of the nation and society to be able to see with the theme of Antigone 's doll house and doll house. Two ladies, Antigone, Nora and Antigone's A doll house, State and society, please follow their own conscience what to expect. Both plays focus on individual laws and national laws, dissatisfaction and obedience, and understanding of the conflict between themselves.
The moral conflicts seen by Henric Ibsen and Antigone at Sophocles' puppet show are similar. Both are conflicts between men and women, responsibility for themselves, and not what I think is right, there is a conflict between human law and sacred law, which society thinks is right. In "Dolls House", the conflict between Nora and Heller, one of the themes surrounding the drama, Antigone uses the conflict between Antioch's Antigon and Crion. Gonenet causes conflict between conflicts and sacred laws and human laws. By not permitting people or groups to represent society in the "house of dolls", Ibsen has the possibility that readers will judge whether a particular problem was right or wrong and create a disagreement. On the other hand, in Antigon, Sophocles expresses the views of Greek society using choruses.
Role comparison: Nora vs. Antigone novel "House of Dolls" and Antigone, Ibsen and Sophocles fundamentally faced women's expectations in society, each of which created two leading character female characters, Nora and Antigone. Nora first forged the signature of her husband's wife and then deceived her husband Tobard and violated the contents of the middle class society. Meanwhile, Antigone challenged openly and despised the rule of a man, including her uncle and King Tevez, Kryon.