Mrs. Linde: Character analysis
In Henrik Ibsen's 19th century drama A Doll's House, the character of Christine Linde acts as a kind of foil for the main protagonist Nora Helmer. In most dramatic interpretations of the play (such as in the 1973 film version), to the audience, Christine appears to be dour, inhibited, and accepting of her fate in contrast with Nora's vivacity. Christine married a man she did not love out of duty to her poor family and her life has been one of unceasing toil. She believes her life is in sharp contrast with Nora's carefree existence. However, Nora, unbeknownst to Christine, has been toiling herself to repay a debt she incurred to enable her husband to take a vacation, an act which she believe saved his life. Still, Mrs. Linde never expresses female solidarity with Nora and even allows Nora's husband to find out that his wife borrowed money without his being aware of the fact. Ultimately, it is Christine's unquestioning self-sacrifice that really embodies what Ibsen believes to be the false ideal of the woman giving herself to marriage and asking nothing of her husband in return; it is brave Nora who attempts to live a more honest ideal away from the confines of this patriarchal institution.
Although she says has spent her life working, Christine has done so for others (a very feminine thing to do) and her fruits of her labor have ultimately been barren because her supposedly wealthy husband who was to provide for her and her relations died penniless. Nora comes to understand the falseness of the ideal that men can protect women; Christine never learns. "Nora…does not follow Kristine's example, does not leave the doll home to sacrifice herself for others. Hers is the more selfish and ruthless decision to re-create herself in truth, if possible, whatever the consequences" (Stetz 156). Nora, by the infamous slamming of the door at the end of the play, makes the decision to leave her own...
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