Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Nora Helmer Essays - A Dolls House, Memory Of The World Register
  Nora Helmer  Nora Helmer is a delicate, pampered wife who was spoiled by her wealthy father  and later by Torvald. As Ibsen alludes, Nora is the doll of this dollhouse, as  her role is to bend into the shape of the ideal housewife. If it is dancing for  her husband, completing the family shopping, or playing childish games to  attract Helmer's attention, Nora will do what it takes to fit the roles. As  readers, we soon read that beneath the blank smile of this doll lies a web of  lies, deception, and debt. Nora lives a life separated from the glittering  housewife of Torvald Helmer. Nora is possible of her own triumphs and tragedies,  independent of the life and decisions of her husband. Using creative symbolic  animal imagery, Ibsen develops a deeper understanding of Nora's character,  allowing her the capability to deceive and strike a blow for independence of  women. Helmer's first spoken phrase comes from the study off-stage: "Is  that my little lark twittering out there?" (346) He refers to Nora as a  lark, a lighthearted, cheerful, petite songbird found in Eurasia. Helmer is most  probably attempting to make the similarity with the characteristics between the  bird and his wife. The name also gives a basic meaning of Nora's actions during  this situation, as when he first calls her his "little lark" Nora is  scurrying around the room humming. This little lark name also suggests Nora's  childlike attitude, and Helmer's desire to promote her childish behavior. It  illustrates Helmer's desire to cling to his false reality of a happy, simple  housewife. What is even more intriguing is the physical characteristics of the  bird in relationship to Nora. All larks have white outer tail feathers with  their black tail, a black band across their upper head, a black line encircling  the crown, and a black "mask" across the eyes. A mask is defined as a  "face covering that, in ritual and theater, disguises the wearer and  usually communicates an alternate identity."(Random House) This is very  fitting for Nora who attempts and temporarily succeeds in disguising her debt  from her husband with lies and deception. This mask allows for the seclusion of  her debt, and the forged signature on the note payable to Krogstad. It is also  the mask that separates the characters from reality, and it is only after this  mask is figuratively removed that the Helmer marriage falls apart, causing Nora  to banish herself from her family and other illusions that she has lived with up  to this point. "Is that my squirrel rummaging around?"(346) Helmer  asks as Nora opens Christmas packages and nibbles on macaroons. A squirrel is  another animal altogether. These rodents mainly live in trees, and their food is  mostly vegetable (especially nuts, seeds, and buds) (Random House). When food is  in abundance squirrels will often store their excess amounts in order to return  when food is scarce. Nora is constantly storing items she has placed high values  on. From money to macaroons, she has found it necessary to squirrel away what  she has, and hides the truth from her husband. Nora will resist spending her  husband's money on expensive items in order to steal or embezzle the money she  needs to pay off her secret debts. Squirrels will hide and bury food, as Nora  buries the truth about the money used for the trip that saved the life of Helmer.    Ibsen uses squirrels and larks to describe the round character that is Nora.    Helmer wishes to simplify Nora's life, relating her to animals that seem joyful  and carefree. Helmer wants to live a life within a dollhouse, with a wife who is  simple, childish and obedient. Ibsen, however, sets the animal comparisons to  unveil an altogether different motive, animals that are deceitful and  independent, animals that are able to survive without the help of others. Nora  is independent of the roles Helmer imposes on her, as she revels her ability to  deceive and comprehend her own demise in the end.    
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