Quotes Flashcards

1
Q

Repeated bird/animal motif

A

-“My little songbird” “Little squirrel”
-imagery of “songbird” - expectation of performance - performative façade of perfection to entertain and amuse him.
-Inequality of the genders leads to a gruesome dynamic - which men become paternal - looking after women who have been deprived of the same educational and societal rights as men.

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2
Q

“His suffering and loneliness seem to provide a dark background to the happy sunlight of our marriage.”

A

-Helmers aesthetic preferences blind him to social realities.
-Metaphor - dark background

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3
Q

TORVALD:
my clandestine little sweetheart, and nobody
knows there’s anything at all between us
- Act 3
Torvald:
for the first time, I am alone with you - quite
alone with you, as you stand there young and
trembling and beautiful.

A

-infantilizing and sexualizing Nora.
-Virgin and the whore – feminist literary theory – stereotypes of women in fiction – shows Torvald see women in no more depth than characters and stereotypes – does not view them as complex real beings.
-Binary opposites ‘ecriture feminine’ – says the male language is one of binary oppositions – Torvald is a product of society,
-Desire her for fantasy – not for who she truly is.
-pedophilic – disturbing obsession with young and viraginous – she is a mother.

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4
Q

Torvald: Nora is his “most treasured possession.”

A

-desire for his exclusive knowledge and possession of Nora.
-reification - sees her as a valuable item with the superlative ‘most’.

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5
Q

TORVALD:
All your father’s recklessness and instability – be quiet! - I repeat, all your father’s recklessness and instability he has handed on to you! No religion, no morals, no sense of duty!
Act 3

A

-Darwinism – hereditary influence.
-Triplet and parallel syntax – emphasize his disapproval.
-hypocritical – she took the loan out of moral duty to protect him – and he is not fulfilling his duty as a loving husband.
-he is ironically melodramatic – though he accuses her of being so ‘don’t be melodramatic’ and he seems more hysterical/emotional.
-Torvald has a lot of long dramatic monologues in this part – melodramatic – he seems out of control compared to Nora’s short precise imperative ‘Read it.’

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6
Q

TORVALD:
An atmosphere of lies contaminates and poisons every corner of the home. Every breath that the children draw in such a house contains the germs of evil.
Act 1

A

-Immorality and illness likened - Victorian view.
-metaphoric ‘poison’ ‘the germs of evil’ - sickness passed from mother to child.
-Dramatic irony - creates anxiety and suspense - audience knows what Nora has done, so this feels like a threat.

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7
Q

Torvald: ‘Skylark twittering’, ‘Squirrel rustling’
“My little songbird”
“Little squirrel”

A

-Not viewed as an equal – animal imagery.
-imagery of “songbird” - expectation of performance - performative façade of perfection to entertain and amuse him.
-Inequality of the genders leads to a gruesome dynamic in which men become almost paternal in looking after women who have been deprived of the same educational and societal rights as men.

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8
Q

Nora: Stage directions, in which Nora “tiptoes across and listens at her husband’s door.”

A

-Door represents divide in-between men and women.
-Paralinguistic seperation of the sexes - childlike.
-Separate Spheres
-Power
-Secrets

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9
Q

Nora: “Can’t we? Just a tiny bit?” and “lots and lots”
Torvald: ‘(wags his finger)’

A

-Childish mannerism – childish and niave.
-repetition of “lots” makes her language sound underdeveloped
-Pleading seems childlike and desperate
-Linguistic choices and dramatic tone make Nora appear childish – without choices – reliant.
-paralinguistic Torvalds takes on the role of the scolding farther

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10
Q

Nora: “Do a little something to help Christine? For my sake?”
Nora “(plays with Torvalds coat-buttons, not looking at him.)”

A

-plead at the end of her favour to mess with Torvalds ego and need to be the “hero”, to achieve her ends.
-Intelligent and manipulative method.
-engages in her assigned role of flirtatiousness – yet is manipulating him to get what shes wants – get the money she desires.
-Nora reduced to a state where the only way she can agin power is through sexual manipulation.
-Use of questions rather than imperatives - powerless.

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11
Q

Nora: I’ll wrap up the notes in pretty gold paper.

A

-concealing the transitionary nature of their relationship – the façade.
-Relationship a sugar coated form of prostitution – she entertains him and is rewarded with money.

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12
Q

Rank Act 1: Macaroons! I say! I thought they were forbidden her.
Nora end of Act 2: Put out some macaroons! Lots of macaroons – for once!

A

-Originally macaroons symbolize Helmer’s micro level control of Nora that extends even to her diet.
-However, Nora’s eating of macaroons is a symbol of rebellion which is strengthened more openly in act 2 - open act of defiance.

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13
Q

Nora: (about/to her children) ‘My sweet little baby doll’, ‘lovely little baby dolls’

A

-repeated motif of her children as dolls – links to the title – repeated cycle of raising women as dolls.

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14
Q

Krogstad: Is that not correct?’, ‘Tell me Mrs Helmer, do you by any chance remember the date of your father’s death’, ‘Your father signed this paper three days after his death’.

A

-Suspense with slow leading questions – audience can sense where its going, makes them feel more empathy for Nora.
-Her naivety and lack of education means she fall into his trap.
-Krogstad’s language – lawyer interrogating witness.

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15
Q

Nora (to Krogstad): (looks defiantly at him) No, it was not. It was I who wrote pappa’s name there.

A

-Exposes Nora’s naivety – she admits it.
-Honest – moral integrity.
-claiming power and pride in the autonomous action.

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16
Q

Krogstad: The law doesn’t concern itself with motives.
Nora: Then the law must be very stupid.

A

-Two different perceptions of law – links to Ibsen’s ‘two kinds of moral laws’ one for men another for women ‘in practical life, woman is judged by masculine law, as though she weren’t a woman, but a man’.

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17
Q

Torvald: ‘When the real crisis comes, you will not find me lacking in strength or courage. I am man enough to bear the burden for us both.’

A

-foreshadowing/proleptic irony – he does not bear the burden.
-Stereotypical language of patriarchal hero.
-alliteration ‘burden for us both’.

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18
Q

Torvald: There, there, there; don’t look at me with those frightened little eyes.

A

-fatherly/patriarchal
-Infantilizes her
-patronizing – little animal motif.

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19
Q

Nora: He must never see that letter. Tear it up. I’ll find the money somehow-

A

-Obsession with façade
-Letter as a symbol of truth – a dramatic device for suspense.
-Repeated motif of tearing

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20
Q

Krogstad: Under the ice? Down in the cold, black water… float up again, ugly, unrecognizable, hairless-?

A

-Thinks façade is the only thing that matters to Nora.
-black water symbolizes death
-preposition ‘down’ to scare her.
-Fear used to control.

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21
Q

Nora Act 2: ‘A – miracle – is about to happen.’
Nora Act 3: ‘Then the miracle of miracles would have to happen.’

A

-Growth of repeated phrase ‘miricale’ – each time it is mentioned it adds depth – 1st about money, now about Torvald saving her, at the end means gender equality.
-Evolution
-Speaking out

22
Q

Christine: Your husband has the key?
Nora: Yes he always keeps it.

A

-Key is a symbol of freedom/control
-Shows he has her under lock and key – prisoner in her own home.
-symbolizes ownership.

23
Q

Nora (to Torvald): correct me, lead me, the way you always do.

A

-plays into her role of helplessness to saturate his ego/god complex.
-Internalised infantalisation.
-uses it to manipulate him.
-Puts herself in the passi position - verb being done to her - manipulative/ resourceful actions.

24
Q

Nora – stage directions: Nora dances more and more wildly… her hair works loose and falls over her shoulder.
Torvald: Your dancing as if your life depended on it.
Nora: It does.

A

-origins of dance – belief that if you move wildly you can sweat out tarantula poison.
-Nora sweating out the poison of oppression and Torvalds control.
-Hair falling loose – symbol of female sexuality or madness.
-Her freedom and life depends on ridding herself of Torvald control.
-Symbol of tarantella.
-Madness
-sexuality
-Rebellion

25
Q

Rank: There’s nothing wrong is there? I mean, she isn’t – er- expecting - ?

A

-dismissal of female emotions as hormonal.
-constantly surveyed through the lens of their gender roles as mother/wife.

26
Q

Nora end of Act 2: Thirty-one hours to live.

A

-Suspense suggest suicide.
-ironic – doll life will end but real life will begin.
-Symbol of her being reborn.

27
Q

Krogstad: I’m a shipwrecked man, clinging to a spar.
Christine: suppose we two shipwrecked souls could join hands?
Christine: Castaways have a better chance of survival together

A

-Metaphor suggests he is destroyed and alone – creates sympathy and complexity so we cannot view his as an antagonist.
-reversal of gender stereotypes – his is vulnerable and in need of her.
-extended metaphor – romantic – foil to Torvald and Nora – outcasts to society don’t have the same pressure to conform to gender roles.
-Shows healthy depiction of a relationship of equals.

28
Q

Stage directions: Helmer leads Nora almost forcibly into the hall.
He leads her, despite her efforts to resist him, gently into the room.

A

-Physical inequality
-Ibsen makes use of stage directions to show the paralinguistic inequality – further emphasizing the issue to the audience.
-Disregard for her autonomy – moves her like a doll.

29
Q

Helmer (about Nora’s tarantella): ‘a trifle to realistic… more than… aesthetically necessary… stay on… let her spoil the impression? No thank you!… my capricious little Capricienne… the beautiful apparition disappeared! An exit should always be dramatic”

A

-Torvald aestheticism – dislike for reality.
-‘let her’ – control/possession.
-diminutives – condescending/infantilizing.
-hugely proleptically ironic – Nora is the beautiful apparition that disappears – her façade/act is fading.
-Proleptic irony – her exit is very dramatic ‘slamming door’.
-foreshadows ending and the end of the façade.
-Control
-Power
-Rebellion
-reality vs fantasy.
-Masculinity – aestheticism.

30
Q

Torvald: Now my little songbirds talking like a real big human being.

A

-simple adjectives – speaks to her like a child.
-Ironic he says this when she’s simply obeying him – like dog more than human being.
-Infantilizing
-Gender
-Power

31
Q

Torvald: my most treasured possession… mine, mine alone, all mine.

A

-sexual desire.
-Objectification – protests men’s ownership of women explicitly.
-Ibsen presents this level of inequality as disgusting.
-possessive pronoun ‘mine’ ‘my’ – repetition to make him seem even more antagonistic – melodrama villain.
-Power
-Objectification
-Gender

32
Q

Rank: At the next masquerade, I shall be invisible.
Rank: There’s a big black hat – haven’t you heard of the invisible hat? Once it’s over your head, no one can see you any more.

A

-everything is performative – even death is a matter of disguises – uses euphemisms instead of telling them outright – no to spoil aesthetics.
-metaphor for death is item of clothing- clothing I a recurring symbol – the role of clothing in defining roles – attention brought to the theatricality of Victorian gender roles.

33
Q

Torvald: (Helmer throws open his door and stands there with an open letter in his hand)

A

-melodrama
-letter tool to indicate suspense.
-Torvald holding it indicates climax.

34
Q

Torvald: wretched woman! What have you done?

A

-alliteration – makes him sound colder
-judgement made in old testament godlike way.
-Ironic considering he wanted something terrible to happen so he could protect her.

35
Q

Torvald: Do you understand what you’ve done? Answer me! Do you understand?

Nora: (looks unflinchingly at him and, her expression growing colder) Yes. I am now beginning to understand.

A

-Torvald’s language – uses imperative, exclamative, interogating questions –tyrannical language.
-Repetition of understand emphasizes Nora’s awakening, when she says she understands the meaning of the word changes.
-She understands and sees him for what he is for the first time – façade has dropped.

36
Q

Torvald (he tears the I.O.U. and both letters into pieces, throws them into the stove and watches them burn.)

A

-destruction of reality to keep the façade -his obsession with perfection in the dolls house.
-Motif of tearing
-façade.

37
Q

Torvald: ‘It’s over! It’s over!… my poor little Nora… I have forgiven you… I have forgiven you’

A

-As though he’s doing her a great kindness
-God complex – bestows his forgiveness upon her like an honor – repetition.
-diminutive – still does not view her as equal.
-It’s over – proleptic irony – their marriage and the façade is over.

38
Q

Torvald: What are you doing in there?
Nora: (offstage) Taking off my fancy dress.

A

-symbol of her choosing not to be a performative doll any more.
-She is pulling the façade away – Torvald picked the dress for her – now she is picking something for herself.
-meta-drama brings attention the theatricality of Nora’s role in the dolls house – it is a matter of costume.

39
Q

Torvald (about forgiving Nora): it mean she has become his property in a double sense; he has, as it were, brought her into the world anew, she is now not only his wife but also his child.

A

-Increasingly disturbing and incestuous – to warn and protest against the effects of ectreme gender inequality.
-she has been reified.
-like god forgiving human sins – religious language - the extremity of the gender inequality – he is all powerful.
-Ironically Nora has been born anew – but no longer as his property.
-power/gender
-God complex

40
Q

Nora: (In her every day dress) Yes, Torvald. I have changed.

A

-explicit – she has changed – double entendre on changed – deeper meaning of changed who she is, what she believes.
-her every days dress is a plain canvas for her new beginning.
-Clothing motif
-awakening/tuning point.

41
Q

Nora: Sit down there Toravld. You and I have a lot to talk about.

A

-Conversation not a lecture ‘you and I’ – equality two people considered in relationship.
-Imperatives.
-She has gained power and voice.

42
Q

Nora: Our home has never been anything but a playroom. I’ve been your doll wife, just as I used to be papas doll child.
‘I’ve been passed from papa’s hands into yours.’

A

-explicit use of doll imagery
-women are objects to be exchanged between men
-reified
-women’s susceptibility to men’s power – in the palm of their hands.
-Doll motif
-Power/gender

43
Q

Nora: I’ve been living here like a pauper, form hand to mouth. I performed tricks for you, and you gave me food and drink.

A

-eloquence -making the point that freedom enable women to be intelligent.
-simile of pauper – shows the poverty of gender equality in Victorian society.
-simple necessities controlled down to food and drink – highlights seriousness of issue.
-Power and control
-Pet imagery

44
Q

Helmer: This is monstrous! Can you neglect your most sacred duties?
Nora: I have another duty which is equally as sacred.
Nora: My duty towards myself.

A

-seen as irreligious for a woman to leave her children.
-demonized for it by society.
-Nora’s autonomy – ‘my’ ‘myself’.
-Used as Ibsen’s mouth piece – women need equality to even be treated as humans/individuals.
-Religion is constructed by the Patriarchal narrative
-Religion doctrine and control.

45
Q

Torvald: First and foremost, you are a wife and mother.
Nora: I am first and foremost a human being.

A

-society objectifies women to the extent they are no longer viewed as human beings.
-Ibsen’s humanism coming through.
-Power and Gender.

46
Q

Torvald: I almost believe you are out of your mind.

A

-Archetypal hysterical women.
-Men dismiss transgression as emotion rather than rationality.
-Gender
-Madness

47
Q

Torvald: but no man can be expected to sacrifice his honor, even for the person he loves.
Nora: Millions of women have done it.

A

-double standards
-Protesting that women are constantly sacrificing things for men in Victorian society – forced to sacrifice freedom and control of themselves.

48
Q

Nora: I don’t believe in miracles anymore.

A

-does not believe gender inequality will happen suddenly or over night – recognizes need for practical action and protest.

49
Q

Torvald: (looks around and gets up) Empty! She’s gone! (A hope strikes him.) The miracle of miracles-?
The street door is slammed shut downstairs.

A

-the dolls house has no dolls
-The bird is free of it’s cage – the cage is empty.
-ends with Torvald considering gender inequality – necessity for other men to do so – sense of hope for the future.
-slams door on the word mirical – empahsises need ofr physical/practical actions to bring about change – cannot be achieved with hope and religion alone.
-slammed door – feminine rage – slams the door on the role of the doll and the façade – a dramatic exit into the real world – symbol of freedom and independence.
-Rebellion against the seen but not heard – loud and angry door slamming – seeds of change.

50
Q

“a winter day”
“fire”
“the stove”
“goes over towards the stove”

A

-juxtaposition between the cold exterior which is metaphoric for the cruel reality of society.
-The internal images of the fire and the stove are images of comfort and domesticity.
-Throughout the play, Nora is often near and comforted by the stove. tying her to the private domestic sphere.
-however, in the denouement she rejects this domestic world.