The latter threatened Nora with written evidence, and Haier Mao flew into a rage when he learned about it, calling Nora a "bad thing", "criminal" and "bitch" and saying that her future was completely ruined by her. After the crisis, she immediately resumed her sweet talk to her wife, and Nora recognized her status as a "doll" subordinate to her husband in the family. When her husband's selfish and hypocritical ugly soul was undoubtedly exposed,
Theme: A Doll's House is a play created by Norwegian dramatist henrik ibsen. This drama is a typical social drama, which focuses on the awakening of Nora, the beloved heroine in the past, and finally ends with Nora's departure.
Through the process of the heroine Nora and her husband Haier Mao from falling in love to breaking up, the drama A Doll's House explores the marriage problem of the bourgeoisie, exposes the contradiction and conflict between the patriarchal society and women's liberation, and then challenges the religion, law and morality of the bourgeois society, encouraging people, especially women, to break free from the shackles of traditional concepts and strive for freedom and equality.
Extended data:
Written in 1879, A Doll's House describes the self-awakening process of the heroine Nora from trusting her husband to breaking up with her husband and finally leaving the Doll's House, which profoundly exposes the ugliness of capitalist society and enthusiastically praises women's liberation.
The work reveals social contradictions from the contradictions between husband and wife in the family, and the different personalities of Nora and Haier Mao are vividly reflected in the work.
Nora is a female image with bourgeois democratic thoughts. She was born in a middle and small bourgeois family, and her father was not rich. "As soon as I got the money, it somehow leaked through my fingers." According to Haier Mao, Nora's father is an "unbelieving, immoral and irresponsible" person. In fact, he is a down-to-earth person who is busy making a living. This family environment undoubtedly has a certain influence on Nora's growth.
Nora was educated by a bourgeois school. She was good at singing and dancing, and she was naive. She is easily satisfied with her happy life in Xiaotian and has many unrealistic fantasies. She is different from the big bourgeois women and ladies, who pursue a meaningless decadent life. She doesn't want to live a parasitic life. In order to support her family, she knitted, embroidered and copied. Although she is sometimes "very tired", she is "very happy".
Nora's tireless work, optimism, contentment and love of life are closely related to her family background. She sympathizes with the victims and unfortunate people in society. Nora extended her hand of friendship and expressed deep sympathy for Dr. Ruanke's misfortune.