Hugh is a very wealthy person, but he always uses friendship to make Hans do what he says. In the second episode, the doll's house, this story is about the relationship between Kelvin and the burner. This relationship is very bad and unusual. Poor Kelbins, no one likes talking and doing something. They are always alone.
For generations of liberating dolls like Barbie and Brazz, Henrik Ibsen's "House of Dolls" reveals shocking secrets. Ibrahim's Norah Helmer is a doll trapped in her house. This emphasizes that all movement of the game will be done in his own living room. Under her husband's oppression, she hopes she plays her wife and mother under strict moral and external guidance, and Nora has her own will I will discover that. After all, Nola noticed that there was only one road leading to her real identity, and that the road began outside the doll's house.
To explain the character and emphasis of Ibsen's dollhouse as a theme, students are asked to create a paper doll of Nora and Taurval. The real identity of the character should be clear to the clothing she wears and the identity assigned to them by others is explained in the doll's clothing design that suits them I will. For example, Nora's paper doll may be wearing the T-shirt of the word "search for identity" or "I am a person." However, she may have a dress and mask that costumes for the tarantella and apron suitable for everyday life. It reflects a rebellious and oppressed role of her "masking".
In Ibsen's drama "Doll House", Ibsen depicts a heroine, Norah Harmer, who dares to despise her husband as a wife and mother to pursue her personality, or to give up her "duty" To do. "Dolls House" challenged the patriarchal view that most Norwegian people thought it was true during the decade and thought that the woman's place was home. Like many women, Nora felt trapped by her father and prevented social rules from recognizing their voices by the time she gets the same feeling of her husband.
The transformation of Nora in Henrik Eben's "House of Dolls" occurred in Henrik Eben's drama "House of Dolls" where society was dissatisfied with women. Women should help their husbands, take care of their children, and play a role in ensuring everything around the house is perfect. Nora is drawn as a doll through a script until he realizes the truth about the world that he lives and is free. Norahermer is an exquisite personality, and her father and Taurval are pampering her for the rest of her life.