Nevertheless severance rather casual drops a stain admiration Nora. Ib — Elizabeth Hardwick, Seduction Betrayal: Women Literature

Norway Timelapse
PlayPlay

previous arrow
next arrow
Norway Timelapse
Budapest Timelapse
Iceland Timelapse
Berlin Timelapse
London Timelapse
previous arrow
next arrow

Nevertheless the severance is rather casual and it drops a stain on our admiration of Nora. Ibsen has put the leaving of her children on the same moral and emotional level as the leaving of her husband and we cannot, in our hearts, asssent to that. It is not only the leaving but the way the play does not have time for suffering, changes of heart. Ibsen has been too much a man in the end. He has taken the man's practice, if not his stated belief, that where self-realization is concerned children shall not be an impediment.

Elizabeth Hardwick, Seduction and Betrayal: Women and Literature

Related Authors: Elizabeth Hardwick | Seduction | Betrayal: Women | Literature

Related Topics: a-doll-s-house, feminsim, ibsen, motherhood, writing

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *