Nora, the heroine of A Doll's House, is a kind, enthusiastic and responsible petty-bourgeois woman. Her awakening has gone through a process of transformation. Nora is simple, kind, elegant and lovely. What is more valuable is her unswerving love for Haier Mao.
She is a rebellious female image with bourgeois democratic ideological tendency, who resists male chauvinism and unreasonable social concepts, strives for women's liberation, pursues personality independence and has the image of "spiritual rebellion" with free will. She is smart and lively, beautiful and naive, full of poetry and pursuing her own ideals. Perseverance, sincerity, kindness, helpfulness and self-sacrifice, at the same time, she is full of human dignity and has the characteristics of spiritual rebellion, striving for personal independence, equality of status and the right to exist.
Her love is generous and selfless, and she doesn't ask for anything in return. In the first year of marriage, Haier Mao was very ill, and the doctor told Nora that she could only recover by going to Italy in the south. They were in a very difficult situation at that time. In order to save her husband's life, Nora borrowed money and forged her father's signature because she didn't want to disturb her dying father at that time. Nora's act of forging a signature violates the law, but her helpless behavior most directly reflects the good side of human nature. She risked her reputation to save her husband. In order not to make him feel uneasy and ashamed, she kept the secret alone. Later, in order to pay off her debts, she had to do some hard work, save money and finally pay off the loan.
Unexpectedly, when she realized that her secret was about to be revealed, she suddenly changed from being strong and brave to being anxious. She is really a "big child" without worldly experience. She doesn't know how to deal with the threats and temptations of creditors. She even wants to bear all the consequences alone and commit suicide to escape the cruelty of reality, just to prevent her husband from being implicated in any way. Even in danger, in Nora's heart, she still prayed that Hemel would stand firmly by her side and they would work together to solve the problem. However, when Mao Haier learned this from the first letter of the creditor, he yelled at Nora and scolded her for being a liar. The sudden change of Mao Haier's attitude towards Nora defeated the defense line in Nora's heart, and Nora finally woke up in this unbearable shouting. From beginning to end, she is a doll, but she has changed from the control of her father to the control of her husband. No matter who is in the hands, she will never escape the fate of being dominated and manipulated.