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Summary Ibsen and Rossetti Critics and Key Quotes

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This is a summary of all the critical readings and key quotes I used when studying and revising Ibsen and Rossetti for my A Level English Lit Paper 1. It's thorough and detailed, covering Nora, Torvald, genetic determinism, From the Antique, Shut Out, Round Tower at Jhansi, A Birthday, Maude Clare,...

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  • August 10, 2023
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Ibsen and Rossetti Critical Readings and Key Quotes
A Doll’s House critical readings:
 While there may be some ambivalence in Nora’s ending, the play was quickly read as an
endorsement of Nora’s ‘desperate plunge into the unknown’ (Stephen Whicher)
 The ‘Social Democraten’ paper said, ‘oh yes there are thousands of such doll-homes’,
suggesting the Helmers were typical of 19th century m/c Norwegian families.
 Hedwig Neimann-Raabe, who wanted to play the lead, refused to play the final scene as
she "would never leave [my] children". Ibsen rewrote the ending, having Torvald force
Nora to the nursery door where she cries but this was quickly abandoned.
 Nora is driven by a moral imperative, Torvald is driven by a social imperative.
 Nora and Christine as dramatic foils?
 The play was a ‘rebellion against the stifling … petty morality of provincial bourgeoisie
life in 19th century Norway’ – Ledger
 At the end of the play N ‘denounces the unreality of her marriage’ and the final door slam
aurally symbolises the ‘detonating quality’ of N leaving. (G.W.Knight)
 ‘Was and is shocking’ (Byatt)
 ADH ‘exploded like a bomb into contemporary life’ and ‘pronounced a death sentence on
accepted social ethics’ (Koht)
 ‘The ideal wife is one who does everything that her ideal husband likes and nothing else’
(George Bernard Shaw)
 Ideals such as Hegels led to ‘ideals of love, fidelity, self-sacrifice and so on, that
constricted and deformed many human lives and selves’ (Moi)
 ‘there are reminders that there are fates and hardships much worse than anything in the
Helmer household, which is no more than a doll’s house’ (Byatt)
 "The economical independence of woman is the first condition of free marriage." (Caird)
 ‘Ibsen holds that the true function of the stage is not so much to amuse as to instruct’
(The Times 1889)
Nora:
 ‘hasn’t a wife the right to save her husbands life?’ ‘I did it for love didn’t I?’ – Nora is
acting on a moral imperative. The juxtaposition of the human and legal response to her
actions suggests the immorality of contemporary norms. Her ‘feminine temperament’
prevent her from understanding (GW Knight)
 ‘First and foremost you are a wife and mother’ ‘I am first and foremost a human being’
 ‘I have been living here with a complete stranger’
 Sally Ledger – N got a ‘glimpse of an alternative self-identity’ ‘it was great fun, though,
sitting there working and earning money It was almost like being a man.’
 Sally Ledger – N lead a ‘doll like existence as Torvalds pretty little wife’, he deploys a
diminutive vocative ‘little squirrel’ ‘little skylark’ ‘spendthrift’ ‘squanderbird’, many front
covers of the play had the image of a bird in a cage to symbolise Nora’s entrapment.
 N seen as ‘a monster and unnatural woman’ (Elaine Long)
 ‘I have the most extraordinary longing to say: ‘bloody hell!’’ – suggests the extent of her
repression
 She contradicts the ‘Darwinian imperative...that a woman should not leave her children’
(Byatt)
 She’s ‘silly...confined in a house full of pointless things’ (Byatt)
 Byatt has ‘less and less sympathy’ for Nora every time she sees the play.
 ‘Every scene tightens the noose around Nora’s neck’ (Byatt)
 Her macaroons ‘could be comic but is part of a tissue of lies and evasions that make up
her life’ (Byatt)
 ‘it saved my husband’s life. I couldn’t put it off’ - N justifying to K
 ‘her feminine ethic forbids her to ask him for the loan’ after Rank said he loves her
(Byatt)

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