The character type of Hedda Gabler is different from Nora Helmer. She expresses her evil for her pleasure; she does not care about others' feelings. Hedda is full of frustration and frustration of her life and turns her bottled energy to bad temperament people. "Life is ridiculous for Hedda, there is no worth seeing at all times, life is not tragic ... life is ridiculous ... this is what I can not stand". Haida does not want to know and confront the reality of her pregnancy.
Hedda Gabler can be regarded as the protagonist of the drama "Hedda Gabler". In the story of "Hedda Gabler", Henrik Ibsen shows that people's sorrow is the cause of women's happiness. Hedda Gabler is struggling to find happiness by misering the people around him in this story. Her desire to be loved has destroyed all the lives of all around her. Hida's attention desire ruined her miserable Elbstead's life, Eilert Loevberg and George Teasman's dream, and eventually led to suicide.
One of the social problems associated with the Ibsen Hedda Gabler's repressive Ipsen problem is the repression of women by restricting women's entry into family life. In Hedda Gabler, the heroine is trying to satisfy her ambitious and independent wisdom in the narrow role that society allows her. You can not make your own ideas, and Hyda's passion is destructive to others and yourself. - ... Some Spaniards accept the Indians and hope to learn more about their culture. The priest enters the Native American tribe and learns the local Hindi language and begins to spread the gospel to persuade the Indians to establish a new village based on Christian faith. By keeping the Indians Christian, the Spaniards are depriving the view of indigenous beliefs.
Title: Header · Gabelle Author: Henrik Ibsen Background: Period of an unknown city in Norway (probably the capital of Christiania - Norway, then): 1890 hero Header · Gabrel - (Marriage name: HEDDA Tesman) General nobility girl her I burned down. She is accustomed to a luxurious life, where she gets all she wants. She is tired of her own life. She got married to George Tessman, so she would not be a strange person in society. - Literary Review of "Rabbit Run" by John Updike John Updike 's novel "Rabbit, Run" tells the person Harry "Rabbit". The rabbit is a man without a brain whose career at the high school basketball star peaked at the age of 18. With the eyes of his wife, he had already gone downhill before an early married marriage. When he was 22 years old and was working as a salesman at a local department store, we met him for the first time in this novel.