Henrik Ibsen
(1828-1906)

“There are two kinds of spiritual law, two kinds of conscience, one in a man and another, altogether different, in woman. They do not understand each other; but in practical life the woman is judged by man’s law, as though she were not a woman but a man.”

Theme

I have been more of a poet and less of a social philosopher than most people have been inclined to believe . . . . I can’t claim the honor of ever having worked consciously for women’s rights. I’m not even sure I know what they are. To me it has seemed a matter of human rights.

- Ibsen

A Doll’s House vs. A Doll House

A Doll House, referring to a child’s miniature model of a home, complete with furnishings, is the literal meaning of Ibsen’s words, and more accurately reflects the situation in which Nora, Torvald, their children and servants, and to some extent their visitors exist: a prettified imitation of a home and a marriage.

Nora: Don’t Dismiss Her Too Easily

• Child-wife

• Adult coquette (tease)

• Determined businesswoman

• A woman desperate enough to consider suicide

• A coldly independent woman

Tragedy or Comedy?

If tragedy, is Nora’s self-destructive assertion of her uncompromising and powerful ego a necessary expression of her Romantic quest for freedom?

If comedy, is the play a social comedy revealing the need for change in the patriarchal middle class, a play that provides insight into how Nora can learn to function as an individual amid a conforming and oppressive society?

Middle-Class Life

Ibsen’s portrayal of middle-class life emphasizes how limiting, brutal, and unforgiving it is

It appears to be affluent and agreeable enough to those who can operate in it successfully. When we first meet the Helmers, many of the most cherished ideals of middle-class life are on display.

Read p. 2350-51 in Norton. See if you can make sense of the play from a Marxist viewpoint.

What Is Proper Conduct?

This society values money, contracts, and conventional respectability over anything else and has no room for people who do not fit comfortably into its expectations

Mrs. Linde & Krogstad

• They live desperate lives. They are still young but have prematurely aged.

• The cruelty of society is not simply economic – Krogstad

• Isolation can leave a person unable to create for himself a meaningful relationship

• Pay attention to Mrs. Linde’s situation at the beginning of the play and how it bears similarity to Nora’s at the end

Dr. Rank = Ibsen’s Society

• External – Successful, rich, well respected. He is a doctor who heals.

• Internal – He is dying from the inside from syphilis. He acquired this disease not from any wrongdoing on his part but from his father as his inheritance.

Torvald: Don’t Dismiss Him as a Fool

Keep in Mind the World View of Ibsen’s Audience

• Torvald is a hard-working and successful professional newly promoted to be in charge of the engine of middle-class respectability

• His problem – if we can call it that – is that his intelligence is entirely determined and limited to his awareness of the social rules around him

• Torvald’s identity is wrapped up in how others look at him (Think about how this works as a social commentary)

• Nothing else matters to him! Nora? Rank? Krogstad? Mrs. Linde

Nora – Endangers his social identity with threat of scandal

Rank – What good is he to Torvald when he is dead?

Krogstad – Challenges his social identity by . . . using his Christian name! How petty!

Mrs. Linde – She is irrelevant

Torvald the Hero

• Torvald makes no attempt to pretend he believes in anything other than what society’s rules indicate

• He appears incapable of even imagining another dimension to life

• We can view him as the fullest living embodiment of the perfectly and entirely social man in his milieu

• That is why Torvald’s comments about how he will act the hero should the need arise are so empty: heroes are by definition unconventionally great. Torvald is a thoroughly conventional man

Is Nora’s transformation from child to adult too sudden to be plausible?

• Do people make self-discoveries that change the course of their actions?

• Is Nora sufficiently characterized to explain how the events that are dramatized can account for a change in her?

• Does her change result in an effective dramatic climax?

• Does her change embody Ibsen’s themes?