Customer center

We are a boutique essay service, not a mass production custom writing factory. Let us create a perfect paper for you today!

Example research essay topic: Men In Her Life Nora - 2,702 words

NOTE: Free essay sample provided on this page should be used for references or sample purposes only. The sample essay is available to anyone, so any direct quoting without mentioning the source will be considered plagiarism by schools, colleges and universities that use plagiarism detection software. To get a completely brand-new, plagiarism-free essay, please use our essay writing service.
One click instant price quote

IN? THE? NAME? OF? THE? FATHER: AN?

ANALYSIS? OF? NORA, THE Doll House English: ? Analysis? of?

Drama IN? THE? NAME? OF?

THE? FATHER: AN? ANALYSIS? OF? NORA, THE MEN IN HER LIFE, AND? HER?

NAVIGATATION? TO Independence? play, ? A? Doll? House, ?

written? by? Henrik? Ibsen? in? 1879, ?

is? considered? a? landmark?

in? drama? for? its? portrayal? of?

realistic? people, ? places, ? and? situations. ?

Ibsen? confines? his? story? to?

the? middle? class. ? He? write s?

of? a? society? that?

is limited? not only? by? its? means? of?

livelihood? but? also? its?

out ok. ? Ibsen? portrays? his characters? as? preoccupied?

with? work? and? money, showing a reduction of values? in? and that lack of quality persons with morals. ?

Ibsen? takes? this? realistic? story? and?

inves ts? it? with? universal? significance. ?

Wrapped? up? in? the? techni que? of?

this? well? constructed? play, Ibsen? is masterful? in?

his? presentation? of? not? only?

realism, ? but he? holds? a? mirror?

up? to the? society? of his day by?

using? the male? figures? as? catalysts? for?

Nora's? ultimate? knowledge? of? self-actualization. ? He?

accomplishes? this? with? such? precision that? the?

audience? might? not? be? aware? all?

the? sub treaties? that? are? creating? their theatrical?

experience. ? ? In? A Doll House, ? Nora?

forges? the? name? of? her? father?

and? risk s? damaging? her? husbands? good?

name. ? ? Henrik? Ibsen? offers? remarks ble? insight?

into? the? nineteenth? century?

preoccupation? with? the? family? and? the?

ro le? of? the? father, and what role is projected upon those who are subjugated to him. ?

This? play? takes? up? the? subject?

of? strong? women? and? weak? men within the plot.

A? prominent? theme? within? this? drama?

is? the? deterioration? of? the?

male, ? who is aware? of? his? role? as?

a? father? figure. This decomposition is observed by the female protagonist (Nora). It is this descent that the role of the father figure is shaped, while creating the? catalyst?

for the catharsis or? change? in? Nora. ? ? When? the?

female? protagonist? challenges? patriarchal? authority, ? she?

does? so? by? undermining? in?

one? form? or? another?

both? the? d oxidant? male?

and? his? family? name. The?

following? analysis? focuses? on? Nora's? ultimate?

r equalization? that? she? must? be? an?

emancipated? person? to? be?

her? true? self. ? Her? navi gation? through?

the? elements? of? crises? are? focused?

through? the? father-figures? in?

her? life. ? The? journey? towards? her?

self-actualization? and? rising? freedom? can be found? within?

her? relationships? with? the? men? in?

her? life. ? This? ultimately?

identifies? the? relevant? thematic? elements? that?

are? pivotal? for? Nora? s? character?

development t? from a vapid child posing as what ever will get her through the day into a inquisitive woman. Nora develops her potential as a true mature person with the experience and knowledge that she has a longer journey ahead of her. A Doll House? makes extensive use? of?

the? fathers? name, ? and?

the? father figure. ? Ibsen? subtly? unravels? the?

family? as? a? male? dominated?

society? almost? fatally? preoccupied?

with? its? own? masculine? image while trapping those who would believe in the myth. ?

A Doll House? utilizes? the? father? as?

a? complex? metaphor?
problem? which? constrains? bot h? men?

and? women. ? Nora's? persona?

and? her? developing? maturity? are? completely?

contr old? and? motivated? by, ? her?

father? s? name, ? Torvald, ? and? Dr. ?

Rank: ? the father-figures? in? her? life. ? ? ? The?

opening? scenes? of? A Doll House?

focus? on? Torvald? and? Nora? Helmer?

preparing? for? Christmas? with?

the? children. ? The? f amply? economic? problems?

establish Nora? s pending conflict, ? along? with? Torvalds?

position? of? authority y. This?

comes? both from his economic dominance and? from? his? (and? Nora's)?

belief? in? his? superiority. ? He? rules?

Nora? and? his? children?

like? a? parody? of? a? God. ?

He? creates? and subjugates? through?

the? animal? names, ? lark, ?

and? s quarrel, when he addresses Nora. For example: Is that my little lark twittering out there? / Is that my squirrel rummaging around? / the little lark? s wings mustnt droop. (I. 154 - 55) By addressing Nora in such a derogatory manner Torvald is lessening her humanity. Nora, in turn, as part of her daily persona mirrors his impression of her by self fulfilling prophecy.

She acts like the animal he has assigned her. She speaks quickly and perky like a lark or is running around hiding things like a squirrel preparing for winter. Through? the? visit? of?

friend? Mrs. ? Linde, ? we?

disco ver? that? Nora? had? to? save?

a? very? sick? Torvald?

by? borrowing? money? and? by?

work ing? two? exclusively? masculine? activities? usually?

forbidden? to? women. ? Assumption n? of?

these tasks? automatically? undermine? Torvalds? authority. ?

The? plot? unfolds? i nto two? parallel? stories, ?

both? of? them? hinging? on? strong?

or? masculine? we n? and? weak, ? feminine, ?

men. ? (Paradoxically, ? the? only? potentially? strong? male?

is? Dr. ? Rank, ? family? friend? and?

secret? admirer? of? Nora, ?

who? is? dying. )? The? flaw?

within? this? patriarchal? framework? be mes? apparent?

when? Nora? discovers that? she? has? no?

legitimate? name? of? her? own. ? She?

ca n? use? neither? her? married? name?

nor? her? maiden? name?

to? borrow? m one. She finds that she cannot?

appropriate? her? fathers? name. ? In? other?

word s, ? as? a? married? woman?

she? has? neither? authority? nor? identity. ?

While Torvalds? authority? rests? on? his?

assumption? of? his? natural? and?

presumably? divinely? bestowed? superiority. ? Once? Nora?

realizes? the? shallowness? of? Torvalds? position, ?

she? rejects? him? as? patriarch?

a nd? herself? as? the? narrowly? defined?

wife. ? When? she? leaves, ?

Nora? understands? that she? has? lived? her?

life as only an unquestioning follower, or as a doll in a doll house. Never being able to choose or express a hope, desire, thought, or wishes, without consideration of the dominant authority in her life. That? authority is, ? first, ? the?

father? who? has? literally?

died, ? and, ? second, ? the? husband? who?

has? proved? to? be? so? weak?

that? he? has? died?

for? her? as? an? authority? figure. ?

Nora, ? in? other? w ords, ?

finds? herself? embodying? a? series? of?

dead? or? weak? men. ? When? she?

closes? the? door? behind? her, ? she?

leaves? a? house? filled? with? d ying?

or dead? patriarchal? figures. ? A?

house? in? which? the? fat her?

as? an? image? of? strength?

and of? salvation? has? already? died.

But it is only through the experiences with these men that Nora? s comes to question her life. ? Within? Nora's?

interactions? with? the? men?

in? her? l ife, ? the? signature? of?

dead? father? comes? at the? beginning?

of? the play. ? In? this? sense, ? Ibsen?

s? writing? becomes? even? more? impressive?

as? Nora's? actions? bring? fort h? the?

hidden? powers? of? fathers? and? their?

names. ? Nora? realizes? that?

t he? name? of? her father? may? be?

all? that? remains? of? him. ? She also arrives?

at? a? basic? realization? about the Law. An institution?

which? she? turns to for salvation. Her?

father? s? name? represents? something? from?

which? she? always? has? been? and?

always? will? b e? separated. ?

It is through Torvald and Krogstad (the man she takes the loan from) that Nora realizes the nature of her relationship with her father and what kind of man he was. By? forging? her? fathers?

name, ? Nora? tried? to?

approve it? the? name? of?

the? father. ? But? as? a?

married? woman? she? cannot?

le gay? assume? her? fathers? name, ?

Since? a? woman? changes?

her? name? when? she? marries. ?

Ironically, ? her? fathers? name has? little? real?

or? symbolic? authority. ? According?

t o? Torvald, ? Nora's? father?

lacked? those? paternal? qualities?

of? uprightness, ? morality, ? and? strength? that?

characterize? a? father? as? God. As shown when Torvald says to Nora: All your fathers flimsy values have come out in you.

No religion, no morals, no sense of duty... (III. 205)? In? other? words, ?

the? name? Nora? wrote?

signified? l italy? or? nothing? more? than?

itself. ? Even? in? her father? s name and its? near?

meaninglessness, ? ? and with her taking it in vain, she begins the events that threaten her family with ruin. Nora? s subjective view of the circumstances force her to use? the?

name? of? her? father?

to? sign? a? loan?

to? save? her? sick? husband? her?

forgery? lack s? validity. ? She?

cannot? invoke? the? symbolic?

law / father . ? Nora? attempts? to? connect? the?

fathers? name? with? signature. ? Had? she?

truly? gotten? her? fa ther's? signature, ? the?

document? would? have? been? legal, ? because?

the? fathers? name? serves? as?

guarantor. ? But? since? the? signature? is?

fa lse, ? and? it? is?

written? by? a? woman, ?

it? signifies? no thing? but? the? absence?

of? the? father. ? By? using? her?

father? s name? to? sign? a legal document (a? violation?

of? the? fifth? commandment), ?

Nora? has? c omitted? a?

kind? of? sacrilege. ? Her? subterfuge? makes?

her? guilty? of? having? challenged? the?

father. And in that act she has questioned the law, her husband, and her position within her family and society as a whole. This leads to her catharsis by forcing her to look at herself in a manner that she had never planned or envisioned. Ibsen? sustains? the?

image? of? Nora's? exclusion?

from? the? weakening? patriarchy? Throughout the play and a series of letters and cards? reinforces?

the real and symbolic? deaths? of? the? father-figure. ?

Nora's? forged? signature? does? in?

fact? allow? her? to? borrow? money?

and? save? her? sick? husband. ? A l though?

she? publicly? tries? to?

build? up? Torvalds? im age? as? a?

banker, ? a? husband, ? and? a? man, ?

she? comes to a point where she cannot can not? reinstate? in?

him? the? mythological? authority? th at? he?

has always lacked and she (at one time) never questioned. ? The? Name-of-the-Father? is? all?

there? is. ? Dr. ? Rank, a family friend, ? the? only?

man with any strength of character has a fatal? illness? ? and? announces? his?

withdrawal from? life? by? leaving a?

card? marked? with? an? X. ?

This? note? symbolizing? Ran ks? Good? -bye? has?

no? meaning, ? but? to?

Nora? and? to? Ra nk? it? means?

death. ? In? contrast? to? Torvald, ? the?

Doc tor? rejects? the? trappings?

of? authority, ? and? he?

bec ome's? Nora's? best? friend. ? Yet? by?

expressing? his? love? for? her, ? he is?

making? a? claim? on?

her. ? And in this action he prevents? Nora? from? asking? for?

his? help. ? As? the?

onl y father? figure? in? the? play? that?

is? not? a? father, ? Rank?

simply shrinks when it comes to the possibility of becoming savior to Nora. ? As doctor? he? committed? himself? to?

life, ? xing? out, ? his? own? name, he?

accepts? his? death. This gesture is symbolic to the audience as well as Nora? s character. By eliminating his signature, he is sealing the fate of Nora and insuring that she becomes her own salvation. ?

When observing Torvald? s reaction to the note Nora questions (possibly for the first time) Torvald? s reaction as inappropriate. ? At the climax of the play Torvald? tries? to?

rekindle? Nora's? slave? spirit in an effort to validate him and to reestablish his dominance over his environment.

Helmer pleads with Nora: You? loved? me? the? way? a?

wife? ought? to? love? her?

hu said. ? Its? simply? the?

means? that? you? couldnt? judge. ? But?

you? think? I? love? you? any?

the? less? for? not?

knowing? how? to? h and?

your? affairs? ? No, ? no? just? lean?

on? me; ? Ill? guide?

you? and? teach? you. ? I?

wouldnt? be? a? man? if?

this? feminine? helplessness? didnt? make? you?

twice? as? attractive? to?

me. ? (III. 207) Unconsciously, ? Torvald? admits? in? the? last?

line? t hat? he? would?

not? be? a? man? if? he?

could? not? believe? in? feminine? helplessness. ?

A roused? by? his? vision?

of? Nora's? weak? femininity, ?

he? again? invokes? his? male? strength?

a nd? authority? by? returning? to? his?

masculine? vocabulary. ? He longs for Nora? to become the?

songbird? beneath? his? wide? wings? and?

a? hunted? dove that? he? has? rescued that he has referred to in the past. ? ?

Torvalds? speech? assumes? a? godlike? role?

by? claim ing? both? motherhood?

and? fatherhood. ? But? the? play? itself?

has? now? unde raised? Torvalds? masculine? powers. ?

He? is? impotent? as? a? god?

and? dead? as? a? male? author rity?

figure, ? and? the? audience?

and Nora? realizes? it (only? Torvald? does? not. ) In this final dialogue Nora is changed.

Torvald does nothing with his insistence but force Nora to truly see the quality of her life marriage and Torvald? s character. And she? makes?

it? clear? that? she?

does? not? blame? only? To torvald, ?

but? to? the entire? patriarchal?

system? that? passed? her? like?

a? c his? from? her?

fathers house? to? Torvalds. ? Nora? has?

already? tried? to? assert? her? own?

identity y and? authority? to? Krogstad. When? she?

denied? or? challenged? the? significance? o f?

the? name? of? the? father she was refusing to become what has always be forced onto her. ? In?

one sense, ? at the? plays? end?

Nora? refuses? to? succumb?

to? the? mas celine identity? and? insists? on?

her? own ability. She declares her aspiration? to?

become? a? person? who? names her signature? indicates. ?

In? her? closing? lines Nora declares: I? m a human being no lees than you or anyway I ought to become one... I can?

t go on believing what the majority says, or what? s written in books. I have to think over these things myself and try to understand them. (III. 209) Nora? rejects? the? patriarchal?

family? structure? th at? denies? her? an?

independent? identity. ? She? demands? a? transformation, ?

an? evolu tion? of relationships based on education and equality. ? ? By? rejecting? Torvald, and?

by? denying? the? absent? and? dead?

father? whose? name? she? invoked? with?

the? forged? signature, Nora has traveled the distance. She has fostered the ability in herself to question the bogus conventions that have held her in subjugation. ? ? By?

giving? Nora? the? right? to? walk?

toward? her? own? identity, Ibsen has given her? the?

right? to? find her? own? language, ? to?

sign? her? own? name. ? Nora's final? gesture?

declares? her? separation? from? the? fixed?

role of? a? wife. ? Nora? seems?

to? stand as dominant example of emancipation. Nora? insists?

on? pulling? herself? away? from?

Torvalds? view? of? her?

as? a? stereotypical? wif e. ? She?

chooses? instead? to? see? herself? as?

someone? in? process, ? in? a?

state? of? bec owing, ? rather? than?

of having? defined? being. ? Nora? discovers? that?

because? her? own? signa ture? had? no?

value, ? she? had? to? take? the?

name? of? the? dead / absent ? father. Eventually?

realizing? that? she? cannot? escape? the?
or? the? name? of? the? absent?

husband / father . ? ? Thus, through Nora? s association and interaction with her father figures she, in a broader sense, ? hints? at? the possibility?

of? a? new dynamic for the family and society as a whole. A time in which the person, no matter the gender, is allowed to sign for him or herself rather, than use the name of an father. In?

A Doll House? Nora? discovers? herself? disenfranchised?

and? d is embodied? by? her?

fathers / husbands ? name. ? This only occurs by virtue of her inner resolve and the inherit flaws Ibsen has given to the male characters of the play. She finally? rejects?

both her father and husband? and? affirms her ambition to? write? her? own?

destiny Works Cited Ibsen, Henrik. A Doll House. Drama: A HarperCollins Pocket Anthology. ed. R. S.

Gwynn. New York: HarperCollins. 1993. 153 - 212.


Free research essays on topics related to: torvald , men in her life, character, nora , father

Research essay sample on Men In Her Life Nora

Writing service prices per page

  • $18.85 - in 14 days
  • $19.95 - in 3 days
  • $23.95 - within 48 hours
  • $26.95 - within 24 hours
  • $29.95 - within 12 hours
  • $34.95 - within 6 hours
  • $39.95 - within 3 hours
  • Calculate total price

Our guarantee

  • 100% money back guarantee
  • plagiarism-free authentic works
  • completely confidential service
  • timely revisions until completely satisfied
  • 24/7 customer support
  • payments protected by PayPal

Secure payment

With EssayChief you get

  • Strict plagiarism detection regulations
  • 300+ words per page
  • Times New Roman font 12 pts, double-spaced
  • FREE abstract, outline, bibliography
  • Money back guarantee for missed deadline
  • Round-the-clock customer support
  • Complete anonymity of all our clients
  • Custom essays
  • Writing service

EssayChief can handle your

  • essays, term papers
  • book and movie reports
  • Power Point presentations
  • annotated bibliographies
  • theses, dissertations
  • exam preparations
  • editing and proofreading of your texts
  • academic ghostwriting of any kind

Free essay samples

Browse essays by topic:

Stay with EssayChief! We offer 10% discount to all our return customers. Once you place your order you will receive an email with the password. You can use this password for unlimited period and you can share it with your friends!

Academic ghostwriting

About us

© 2002-2024 EssayChief.com