The death of Mrs. Hedda Gabler and Mrs. Bovary is a common theme. With the use of unnatural deaths by Henrik Ibsen and Gustav Flaubert, the author was able to dismantle the hero and reveal their true personality. The death of Mrs Bovary's Emma Bovary and Hedda Gabler's deaths of Hedda Gabler and Ejlert Lovborg are the top points that the reader understood the letters in the text. Emma, or Madame Boberly died after drinking the poison given to her by admirers. Her lifestyle has driven her into debt and adultery, and Emma felt that she is suicide only by escape from her self-stated "boring life".
Mrs Bofari and Lev Tolstoy 's Anna Karelina Gustav Flaubert wrote to Mrs Bovary: "Death of a person always causes a paralysis situation, it is very difficult, it grabs the arrival of nothing and it actually To succumb to the facts that arise (258) It is more embarrassing when death is suicide, when nothing happens to self-initiation, it's more embarrassing For the readers of Flaubert's Madame Bovary and Lev Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, Heroine's literary suicide is similar to a coma, even in the imaginary world being assembled, it also needs to accept the pause of death reality.
The female oppression of Hedda Gabler is in Hedria Gabler of Henrik Ibsen and the repression of Victorian women is revealed by resistance to Hedda 's social norm, which limits her entry into her family life. The main purpose of this work is to think that Hedda is not her husband's wife but a father's daughter. Through the script, Haida strives to satisfy her ambitious and independent character. Latin America: The heritage of oppression When Europeans first came to Latin America, they did not understand their infinite behavior. History shows that European people have imposed a lot of things on the territory of Latin America and have long-term devastating influences on indigenous peoples. During the centuries after 1492, Europeans will dominate the majority of South America and will force foreign cultures into the civilization that existed before their arrival.