YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Brand by Henrik Ibsen Community and the Individual
Essays 151 - 180
In five pages this paper argues that love is not always a marriage prerequisite as portrayed in A Doll's House. There are no othe...
This paper consists of six pages in which comparisons are made between Oedipus and Ibsen's heroine Nora Helmer along with a compar...
In five pages this paper psychologically probes the conflicts within Hedda Gabler as presented in Ibsen's play. Four sources are ...
In five pages this paper examines the personal empowerment that transforms heroine Nora Helmer in this social drama by Ibsen. The...
In nine pages this play analysis examines how the major characters' sense of duty is represented by their choices. Four sources a...
In five pages this paper examines how society changed from individual acceptance to individual oppression in a comparative analysi...
hand, is a model of blunt decorum and steadiness, a man ruled by his class and conventions rather than feeling: basically, a guy ...
In seven pages this paper analyzes Ibsen's social play in terms of its dualities represented in plot and characterization. Six so...
In five pages this paper considers society's dualism as represented in Ibsen's social drama. One source is listed in the bibliogr...
same as if it were a dolls house, it is built on illusion and fantasy. Within the dolls house Nora become the doll, possibly livin...
In five pages this paper examines the play, its conflict, and its neurotic protagonist. There are no other sources listed....
In 3 pages the uses of irony in this social drama are examined. There are 4 sources cited in the bibliography....
In five pages this paper discusses how in Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard and in Ibsen's Ghosts the playwrights are able to convey so...
In five pages this paper subjects Ibsen's social drama to a literary analysis that focuses on characterization, plot, and irony. ...
hostile public world. Yet, she confesses to a friend that she keeps her business activities a secret from him because it would be ...
him to commit suicide. Judge Brack discerns Heddas duplicity in Lovborgs downfall and insinuates that he will hold this over her. ...
of society with fewer rights than a woman was a child. Torvald would welcome his wife home from a shopping trip with condescendin...
leaves, but in Hedda, both Eilert and Hedda die. In his introduction to The Feast at Solhoug, which came in for its share of cri...
society (Books and Writers). "He did not much believe in the possibility of individual freedom but emphasized the importance of ex...
she is essentially immersed in her role. But, as the story develops we begin to wonder if all of these characteristics of being ch...
normal and average. Nora is a woman who is seen as nothing more than a simple creature. Her husband often refers to her in cond...
and changes his mind. He will not sacrifice his only daughter because of Menelaus unfaithful wife. (The impetus behind the Trojan ...
serves to foil Nora in Acts I and II by tearing down Noras optimistic attitude with her own weighty pessimism. Mrs. Linde has not...
he looked at the possibility that a woman, finding herself in a loveless marriage and living a life as an overprotected wife, was ...
she develops the illusion of her identity slowly vanishes. She is slowly seen as an intelligent woman who desires more from life t...
"Two years later the masterpiece Brand was produced and shortly after, he left Norway, spending the better part of his life in Ita...
quite clear that Edith has just cause to feel alienated from her husband and her marriage from its inception. In the first half of...
In all honesty, Dr. Stockmann fails to think outside his scientific reasoning. He is, in a sense, blind to those who do not believ...
beginning of the story she is simply a doll, a pretty thing that plays her role as the good wife and mother. As one author notes, ...
as "little skylark twittering." Her husband calls her "little featherbrain," "little scatterbrain," "squirrel sulking", and "song ...