Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House was originally written in Norwegian scripts in the 19th century and offers excerpts from the lifetimes of Nora and Torvald Helmer. Through the script, role experience fights emotional confrontation, secrecy, dialogue, exploitation, distraction. Ibsen manipulated the clothes to show the entry and withdrawal of the characters. The representation of infiltration and contraction represents the spectrum from the inside to the outside.
Critical Analysis of Starting Play of A Dolls House In the opening ceremony of the drama "A Dolls House", the background of the stage is as home as a doll house. Things drawn in the house are so small that they represent a doll's house and everything is a miniature. - At some point after the publication of 'Dolls House', Henrik Ibsen made a speech at the Norwegian Women's Rights Association's conference. He explained to the group: "I must refuse to accept the honor of working for the women's rights movement, I do not know what the women's rights are. For me this is a human rights issue . "
Nora's awakening at the dollhouse in Ibsen is the position of a woman in the 1800s, when the dollhouse is written, it is the status of second-class citizens. Women do not have the right to vote, possess property or conduct legal transactions. The role of women is limited to housewives. In "Dolls House", Ibsen did a wonderful job of introducing a role as a person who woke up Nora's life. According to the social norm of the time, initially she care only about being a perfect wife and mother. Later, she noticed that she could not continue to be the shadow of her husband. Finally, she decided she was responsible
Given the imagination, Nora has power and ownership over her house. Indicate that the owner owns the house; this means that there is a doll's house because Nora is a doll and the doll's house is her creation. Nora thinks that her child is a doll, "my little sweet doll" (Ibsen 18). Nora is talking to the children and playing. The Adores House headline is prepared for the audiences house audience and clarifies the role of women in writing and the problems caused by the severe imbalance between men and women. Ibsen's concern about the status of women in society is also reflected in A Dolls House. He believes that women have the right to extend their personality, but in reality their role is often self-sacrificing. Whether it is husband or society, women are not treated equal to men.