The Burden of Selfishness in Ibsen's Modernist Plays

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Issue:

English

 

Written by:

Kenneth M

 

Date added:

December 10, 2015

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

3 / 824

 

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9079 times

 

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She says that all her wrong doings were for the reasonable purpose of love, "I'm not such a fool as that. I did it for love, didn't I?" (29). Nora dumbs down to assure Torvald he is right, and when she agrees he responds with, "There's my little sky-lark talking common sense" (69). Torvald, being extremely selfish himself, refers to Nora as his little songbird and defines his idea of a wife to her...
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Torvald, being extremely selfish himself, refers to Nora as his little songbird and defines his idea of a wife to her. He constantly tells her to continue on chirruping and flying about the house like usual, as any wife should do. When something goes wrong Torvald leaps to make Nora her chirrupy self again, "Now, now, not so wild and excitable! Let me see you being my own little singing bird again" (60)...
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