Elements of political and social protest writing: Text overview - A Doll’s House
- power and powerlessness:
- Ibsen’s target in terms of political and social protest writing is marriage, financial institutions and the role of women.
- repression of women, society that expects caring daughters, wives and mothers, little opportunity to take control of their own lives. Ibsen said he wrote the play because 'a woman cannot be herself in modern society'. The play is clearly a feminist text.
- Krogstad demonstrates how society’s expectations, and the emphasis on reputation, can repress and make people powerless to change their lives. The powerful are represented in the play by the figure of Torvald who not only controls and manipulates his wife but also has authority over Krogstad. By the end of the play Nora asserts her independent thoughts and makes a stand against the oppressive, superficial nature of her marriage. Her exit from the house at the end of the play where she leaves her husband, children and the doll’s house itself, still has the power to shock audiences and can excite both admiration and condemnation. The play’s resolution is likely to produce lively debates in the classroom. Power and powerlessness As a husband who dictates what happens in his own home, even to the extent of controlling what his wife will wear and how she will dance the tarantella, and as a banker who has the power to both hire and fire staff, Torvald represents an authoritative masculine middle class power in the play. He reflects society’s belief that those who work in financial and legal institutions are important and that men are masters in their homes and that their wives are under their care and protection. He is also rigid in his belief that women are subservient to men
and should obey them. Torvald’s power is bound up with his strict and
uncompromising moral values, or more significantly his views on respectability.
For this reason, at the end of the play he says he cannot accept or forget Nora’s
secret past action of forging her father’s signature – even though it was to
procure money for Torvald’s health. After he realises his own reputation will not
be harmed by her action, he wields the power of forgiveness on her: “There is
something indescribably wonderful and satisfying for a husband in knowing that
he has forgiven his wife.” However, by the end of the play Torvald‘s power
diminishes as Nora finds her voice and looks forward to independence; for all his
power, he is unable to stop Nora leaving him.
Krogstad has a kind of power within the play as he blackmails Nora, and in some
respects has the power of the stock villain. However, his position is complex and
like her he himself is oppressed and trapped by society’s rules and expectations.
He too committed forgery, though unlike Nora his crime did not have a “brave”
motive and it was discovered. As a result he is defined by his transgression,
condemned as a criminal and cannot shake off the yoke. In many ways he is
Torvald’s antagonist; he despises Torvald but paradoxically craves the
respectability Torvald commands – largely because he wants to secure the
future of his children. He tells Nora “My sons are growing up; for their sake, I
must try to regain what respectability I can." It is his love for his children and
growing acceptance of Mrs Linde’s love for him that motivates him finally to feel
some compassion for Nora. Thus he returns the bond to Torvald thereby
confirming that the truth will forever be concealed. In the end, he emerges as a
far more humane and charitable character than Torvald Helmer.
Nora is trapped in a society that is run by men who expect her, and other
women, to perform an expected role in a clearly defined way. Women are
restricted in what they can do and how they should think. Many doors are closed
to them. Of particular note in this play is the fact that women cannot take out
loans in their own names. As a married woman there are other obligations on
Nora; she must behave as Torvald requires. In the dramatic present of the
drama, she seems to be the plaything of her husband, petted, dressed and
pampered by him, as if she is his doll. It is important to note, though, that
Torvald is not a cruel man and he does seem to love Nora. At no point does he
say that he does not care for her and he is generous. Such is the complexity of
the doomed hero Ibsen creates. Yet, Torvald is possessive (Nora tells Mrs Linde
he wants “to have me all to himself”) and he does not respect her ideas or
encourage the development of her intellect. In no way is their marriage any sort
of real partnership; neither is it a grown up relationship. Indeed at the end of the
play she declares that in eight years she and Torvald have never spoken of
anything important.
Although the play often seems to be about the change of Nora from a position of
weakness to one of strength, even when she is weak, her position in the
narrative present is undercut with irony. There is much more to her than first
appears. As the backstory emerges, the audience learns that in the past she has
acted independently and with some determination; she has secretly made
decisions and been proactive in financially supporting their marriage and the
health of her husband by taking out a loan to fund his recuperation in Italy. The
irony is sharpened by Torvald’s recovery which was only possible because of her
fraudulent actions and his ignorance of the risk she has taken for him. He is
ignorant too of her working for eight years to pay off her debt and of her now
being blackmailed by her lender. Although what Nora has done is deceitful and
illegal, it does show strength of character and a determination that is at odds
with her husband’s treating her like a child, calling her his skylark and his
squirrel.
What Ibsen dramatises in the play is the collision between Nora’s past actions,
the pressure of her blackmailer and Torvald’s growing awareness of what she
has done. When Torvald discovers her deceit she suffers both his condemnation
and his judgment that she will no longer be permitted to have contact with her
children. When Nora realises that Torvald’s concern for appearances and
reputation far outweighs all else, she can finally see her marriage for what it is.
Other women in the play are also victims of society’s expectations of what is
acceptable and desirable for their gender. Although Mrs Linde seems, on one
level, to be a representation of a ‘new’ independent woman, someone who has
strength of mind and one whom Torvald has no hesitation about employing in
his bank, she is not a happy woman. She is childless and bitter. In Mrs Linde’s
backstory, the audience learns that, as she herself was economically powerless
she had to relinquish her true love, Krogstad, to marry a man who could provide
for her family. But the financial security he offered did not last, his ‘business was
shaky’ and after he died, it collapsed altogether: “there was nothing left”. She
then sacrificed years of her life, in bitter toil, caring for her bedridden mother.
Although she is about the same age as Nora, she is physically weakened by the
life she has led, and she admits that this life has hardened her: “no one to work
for; it makes one so bitter.” For Ibsen, happiness and reward only come through
love and her being reunited with Krogstad at the end of the play is a neat
counterpoint to Nora’s striking out for independence.
Nora’s nanny has also suffered at the hands of society. Having had an
illegitimate baby and been abandoned by its father, she had no option than to
leave her child to take up paid employment as she was “a poor girl what's got
into trouble.”
In a society where status is determined by money, gender and reputation, many
of the characters in the play are victims of repressive attitudes.
The power of respectability
The world of A Doll’s House is comfortable and middle class. In this world those
who have the most power are those who are most respectable. Torvald sets
great store on respectability. In his two professions of lawyer and banker there
are clear rules of conduct and he will not involve himself in anything that is not
“absolutely respectable”. Torvald equates respectability with integrity and
morality. For this reason he thinks he has the right and power to cast judgment
on Krogstad. When Torvald thinks that Nora has ruined his reputation he has a
plan to keep the children away from her to save them from being tainted and he
wants to preserve the appearance of his marriage for the sake of respectability.
However, respectability in the play is shown to be a façade. Although Torvald
sneers at Nora’s father, he was happy to accept the money that he believed had
been left to Nora in her father’s will. And when he finds out the truth of Nora’s
deception his chief objective is in how he can cover it up to save himself. His
relief when he reads Krogstad’s note which says he won’t expose Nora, is to
think of himself: “I am saved!”, he says, as if this is all that is important. In the
eyes of society, of course, it is important and Torvald’s reaction perpetuates the
myth.
The power of money and the significance of a piece of paper
Money is power in the world of this play. It is the central means by which the
powerful exert control. The characters’ lack of money, their need for money, and
their desire to get money motivate much of the play’s action.
Krogstad’s power comes from the two hundred and fifty pounds he loaned to
Nora and it gives him the power to blackmail her: “If I get thrown into the gutter
for a second time, I shall take you with me.”
But the money that Nora borrows has greater significance; it also had the power
to save Torvald’s life. As Nora tells Mrs Linde, Torvald would never have
recovered from his breakdown if she hadn’t obtained the money to finance the
trip to Italy. Since the family did not have the money themselves and since
Torvald would have found borrowing humiliating, Nora took the initiative, found
a loan shark and forged her father’s signature. This act, to save her husband’s
life also makes her a criminal.
However, it could also be argued that in committing her criminal act, Nora
signed her passport into the masculine world of finance and power. In her
conversation with Mrs Linde, Nora expresses some pride in what she achieved:
“Ah, but when a wife who has a little business sense, and knows how to be
clever-” In a sense this act empowers her and gives her something to build on
when she makes her final decision to leave.
Rebellion
The main act of rebellion against oppression and control is clearly Nora’s
dramatic exit at the end of the play. It was so shocking when the play was
written that an alternative ending was also produced, in which Nora is shown
her sleeping children and finds it impossible to leave them. Her declaration that
her first duty is to herself, not to her husband and children, is an absolute
rejection of what society expects of her. A contemporary commentator at the
time wrote of the ending that when Nora leaves 'that slammed door
reverberated across the roof of the world'.
Earlier in the play, however, there are other rebellions from Nora that suggest
she is a stronger character than the simpering, silly woman she can at first
seem. She defies her husband by eating macaroons, even though he has said she
shouldn’t, and, of course, she had the strength of character to get the loan and
then to work in secret to pay it off.
But it is at the end of the play that Nora finds a powerful rebellious voice. After
Krogstad returns the bond and Torvald tears it up, suggesting that life can
continue as normal, Nora defiantly analyses for her husband what she feels her
life and marriage has been. She believes that she has done nothing other than
perform tricks for both her father and Torvald: “You and papa have done me a
great wrong. It's your fault that I have done nothing with my life.” She refuses
Torvald’s offer of education saying that she wants to educate herself. She also
stands strong when Torvald throws at her her duty to her husband and children
and her position in the respectable world; she simply says she only knows what
is necessary for her. Perhaps her most daring act of defiance though is her stand
against religion and morality with which Torvald threatens her to try to coerce
her into submission. She says she does not know what religion is and that the
moral law that says she has no right to spare her dying father or save her
husband’s life must be wrong. Her final defiance, as she leaves the family home,
is to call her husband a “stranger” thereby breaking asunder the marriage bond
on which nineteenth century society was so firmly rooted.
Setting
The action of the play takes place in the living room of the Torvald’s household
and in this respect it satisfies the demands of nineteenth century naturalistic
drama. This small domestic setting, in which all three acts take place, helps to
create the feelings of oppression and repression that run through the play. Ibsen
clearly describes the setting in the stage directions at the start; the presentation
of a comfortable middle class home is important to the story. However, although
the action is all in one room, society’s pressures and expectations, particularly
with regard to reputation, press in on the world of the drama from outside and
are brought into the home through letters and through the characters who visit.
The title of the play is worth considering here, also, implying, as it does, so many
things about the Helmers and their marriage. The indefinite article ‘a’ suggests
their situation is representative of many.
Social commentary
- late 19th century Western European society, the middle class. reflects Ibsen’s concerns about women’s rights, but also about human rights in general. It is a powerful exploration of how ‘free’ people can be oppressed by social expectations and what sacrifices might need to be made to truly break free, if such freedom is possible. one of the major questions that the play raises: is freedom ever achievable in civilised society? Some critics have seen this as a play exposing the oppression of women; others feel that the play is about every person discovering who they really want to be. When Nora says “I believe that I am first and foremost a human being” her comments resonate with everyone.
- power and powerlessness:
- Ibsen’s target in terms of political and social protest writing is marriage, financial institutions and the role of women.
- repression of women, society that expects caring daughters, wives and mothers, little opportunity to take control of their own lives. Ibsen said he wrote the play because 'a woman cannot be herself in modern society'. The play is clearly a feminist text.
- Krogstad demonstrates how society’s expectations, and the emphasis on reputation, can repress and make people powerless to change their lives. The powerful are represented in the play by the figure of Torvald who not only controls and manipulates his wife but also has authority over Krogstad. By the end of the play Nora asserts her independent thoughts and makes a stand against the oppressive, superficial nature of her marriage. Her exit from the house at the end of the play where she leaves her husband, children and the doll’s house itself, still has the power to shock audiences and can excite both admiration and condemnation. The play’s resolution is likely to produce lively debates in the classroom. Power and powerlessness As a husband who dictates what happens in his own home, even to the extent of controlling what his wife will wear and how she will dance the tarantella, and as a banker who has the power to both hire and fire staff, Torvald represents an authoritative masculine middle class power in the play. He reflects society’s belief that those who work in financial and legal institutions are important and that men are masters in their homes and that their wives are under their care and protection. He is also rigid in his belief that women are subservient to men
and should obey them. Torvald’s power is bound up with his strict and
uncompromising moral values, or more significantly his views on respectability.
For this reason, at the end of the play he says he cannot accept or forget Nora’s
secret past action of forging her father’s signature – even though it was to
procure money for Torvald’s health. After he realises his own reputation will not
be harmed by her action, he wields the power of forgiveness on her: “There is
something indescribably wonderful and satisfying for a husband in knowing that
he has forgiven his wife.” However, by the end of the play Torvald‘s power
diminishes as Nora finds her voice and looks forward to independence; for all his
power, he is unable to stop Nora leaving him.
Krogstad has a kind of power within the play as he blackmails Nora, and in some
respects has the power of the stock villain. However, his position is complex and
like her he himself is oppressed and trapped by society’s rules and expectations.
He too committed forgery, though unlike Nora his crime did not have a “brave”
motive and it was discovered. As a result he is defined by his transgression,
condemned as a criminal and cannot shake off the yoke. In many ways he is
Torvald’s antagonist; he despises Torvald but paradoxically craves the
respectability Torvald commands – largely because he wants to secure the
future of his children. He tells Nora “My sons are growing up; for their sake, I
must try to regain what respectability I can." It is his love for his children and
growing acceptance of Mrs Linde’s love for him that motivates him finally to feel
some compassion for Nora. Thus he returns the bond to Torvald thereby
confirming that the truth will forever be concealed. In the end, he emerges as a
far more humane and charitable character than Torvald Helmer.
Nora is trapped in a society that is run by men who expect her, and other
women, to perform an expected role in a clearly defined way. Women are
restricted in what they can do and how they should think. Many doors are closed
to them. Of particular note in this play is the fact that women cannot take out
loans in their own names. As a married woman there are other obligations on
Nora; she must behave as Torvald requires. In the dramatic present of the
drama, she seems to be the plaything of her husband, petted, dressed and
pampered by him, as if she is his doll. It is important to note, though, that
Torvald is not a cruel man and he does seem to love Nora. At no point does he
say that he does not care for her and he is generous. Such is the complexity of
the doomed hero Ibsen creates. Yet, Torvald is possessive (Nora tells Mrs Linde
he wants “to have me all to himself”) and he does not respect her ideas or
encourage the development of her intellect. In no way is their marriage any sort
of real partnership; neither is it a grown up relationship. Indeed at the end of the
play she declares that in eight years she and Torvald have never spoken of
anything important.
Although the play often seems to be about the change of Nora from a position of
weakness to one of strength, even when she is weak, her position in the
narrative present is undercut with irony. There is much more to her than first
appears. As the backstory emerges, the audience learns that in the past she has
acted independently and with some determination; she has secretly made
decisions and been proactive in financially supporting their marriage and the
health of her husband by taking out a loan to fund his recuperation in Italy. The
irony is sharpened by Torvald’s recovery which was only possible because of her
fraudulent actions and his ignorance of the risk she has taken for him. He is
ignorant too of her working for eight years to pay off her debt and of her now
being blackmailed by her lender. Although what Nora has done is deceitful and
illegal, it does show strength of character and a determination that is at odds
with her husband’s treating her like a child, calling her his skylark and his
squirrel.
What Ibsen dramatises in the play is the collision between Nora’s past actions,
the pressure of her blackmailer and Torvald’s growing awareness of what she
has done. When Torvald discovers her deceit she suffers both his condemnation
and his judgment that she will no longer be permitted to have contact with her
children. When Nora realises that Torvald’s concern for appearances and
reputation far outweighs all else, she can finally see her marriage for what it is.
Other women in the play are also victims of society’s expectations of what is
acceptable and desirable for their gender. Although Mrs Linde seems, on one
level, to be a representation of a ‘new’ independent woman, someone who has
strength of mind and one whom Torvald has no hesitation about employing in
his bank, she is not a happy woman. She is childless and bitter. In Mrs Linde’s
backstory, the audience learns that, as she herself was economically powerless
she had to relinquish her true love, Krogstad, to marry a man who could provide
for her family. But the financial security he offered did not last, his ‘business was
shaky’ and after he died, it collapsed altogether: “there was nothing left”. She
then sacrificed years of her life, in bitter toil, caring for her bedridden mother.
Although she is about the same age as Nora, she is physically weakened by the
life she has led, and she admits that this life has hardened her: “no one to work
for; it makes one so bitter.” For Ibsen, happiness and reward only come through
love and her being reunited with Krogstad at the end of the play is a neat
counterpoint to Nora’s striking out for independence.
Nora’s nanny has also suffered at the hands of society. Having had an
illegitimate baby and been abandoned by its father, she had no option than to
leave her child to take up paid employment as she was “a poor girl what's got
into trouble.”
In a society where status is determined by money, gender and reputation, many
of the characters in the play are victims of repressive attitudes.
The power of respectability
The world of A Doll’s House is comfortable and middle class. In this world those
who have the most power are those who are most respectable. Torvald sets
great store on respectability. In his two professions of lawyer and banker there
are clear rules of conduct and he will not involve himself in anything that is not
“absolutely respectable”. Torvald equates respectability with integrity and
morality. For this reason he thinks he has the right and power to cast judgment
on Krogstad. When Torvald thinks that Nora has ruined his reputation he has a
plan to keep the children away from her to save them from being tainted and he
wants to preserve the appearance of his marriage for the sake of respectability.
However, respectability in the play is shown to be a façade. Although Torvald
sneers at Nora’s father, he was happy to accept the money that he believed had
been left to Nora in her father’s will. And when he finds out the truth of Nora’s
deception his chief objective is in how he can cover it up to save himself. His
relief when he reads Krogstad’s note which says he won’t expose Nora, is to
think of himself: “I am saved!”, he says, as if this is all that is important. In the
eyes of society, of course, it is important and Torvald’s reaction perpetuates the
myth.
The power of money and the significance of a piece of paper
Money is power in the world of this play. It is the central means by which the
powerful exert control. The characters’ lack of money, their need for money, and
their desire to get money motivate much of the play’s action.
Krogstad’s power comes from the two hundred and fifty pounds he loaned to
Nora and it gives him the power to blackmail her: “If I get thrown into the gutter
for a second time, I shall take you with me.”
But the money that Nora borrows has greater significance; it also had the power
to save Torvald’s life. As Nora tells Mrs Linde, Torvald would never have
recovered from his breakdown if she hadn’t obtained the money to finance the
trip to Italy. Since the family did not have the money themselves and since
Torvald would have found borrowing humiliating, Nora took the initiative, found
a loan shark and forged her father’s signature. This act, to save her husband’s
life also makes her a criminal.
However, it could also be argued that in committing her criminal act, Nora
signed her passport into the masculine world of finance and power. In her
conversation with Mrs Linde, Nora expresses some pride in what she achieved:
“Ah, but when a wife who has a little business sense, and knows how to be
clever-” In a sense this act empowers her and gives her something to build on
when she makes her final decision to leave.
Rebellion
The main act of rebellion against oppression and control is clearly Nora’s
dramatic exit at the end of the play. It was so shocking when the play was
written that an alternative ending was also produced, in which Nora is shown
her sleeping children and finds it impossible to leave them. Her declaration that
her first duty is to herself, not to her husband and children, is an absolute
rejection of what society expects of her. A contemporary commentator at the
time wrote of the ending that when Nora leaves 'that slammed door
reverberated across the roof of the world'.
Earlier in the play, however, there are other rebellions from Nora that suggest
she is a stronger character than the simpering, silly woman she can at first
seem. She defies her husband by eating macaroons, even though he has said she
shouldn’t, and, of course, she had the strength of character to get the loan and
then to work in secret to pay it off.
But it is at the end of the play that Nora finds a powerful rebellious voice. After
Krogstad returns the bond and Torvald tears it up, suggesting that life can
continue as normal, Nora defiantly analyses for her husband what she feels her
life and marriage has been. She believes that she has done nothing other than
perform tricks for both her father and Torvald: “You and papa have done me a
great wrong. It's your fault that I have done nothing with my life.” She refuses
Torvald’s offer of education saying that she wants to educate herself. She also
stands strong when Torvald throws at her her duty to her husband and children
and her position in the respectable world; she simply says she only knows what
is necessary for her. Perhaps her most daring act of defiance though is her stand
against religion and morality with which Torvald threatens her to try to coerce
her into submission. She says she does not know what religion is and that the
moral law that says she has no right to spare her dying father or save her
husband’s life must be wrong. Her final defiance, as she leaves the family home,
is to call her husband a “stranger” thereby breaking asunder the marriage bond
on which nineteenth century society was so firmly rooted.
Setting
The action of the play takes place in the living room of the Torvald’s household
and in this respect it satisfies the demands of nineteenth century naturalistic
drama. This small domestic setting, in which all three acts take place, helps to
create the feelings of oppression and repression that run through the play. Ibsen
clearly describes the setting in the stage directions at the start; the presentation
of a comfortable middle class home is important to the story. However, although
the action is all in one room, society’s pressures and expectations, particularly
with regard to reputation, press in on the world of the drama from outside and
are brought into the home through letters and through the characters who visit.
The title of the play is worth considering here, also, implying, as it does, so many
things about the Helmers and their marriage. The indefinite article ‘a’ suggests
their situation is representative of many.
Social commentary
- late 19th century Western European society, the middle class. reflects Ibsen’s concerns about women’s rights, but also about human rights in general. It is a powerful exploration of how ‘free’ people can be oppressed by social expectations and what sacrifices might need to be made to truly break free, if such freedom is possible. one of the major questions that the play raises: is freedom ever achievable in civilised society? Some critics have seen this as a play exposing the oppression of women; others feel that the play is about every person discovering who they really want to be. When Nora says “I believe that I am first and foremost a human being” her comments resonate with everyone.