¶ … Henrik Ibsen's a Doll's House
Henrik Ibsen's characters are not the people they appear to be. On the surface and at the beginning of the play audiences see typical people, pursuing typical lives with typical problems. Not until the play progresses, and in retrospect, do audiences realize that society negatively or positively stimulates the characters motives and actions. This paper looks at three such characters in Henrik Ibsen's play A Doll's House -- Torvald, the protagonist Nora and the antagonist Krogstad.
Though not the antagonist or the protagonist, Torvald plays a central role in A Doll's House. He is not the character that he appears to be. In the beginning of the play Emma Goldstein notes,
He is an admirable man, rigidly honest, of high moral ideals, and passionately devoted to his wife and children. In short, a good man and an enviable husband. Almost every mother would be proud of such a match for her daughter, and the latter would consider herself fortunate to become the wife of such a man.
While Torvald is a model man, underneath his facade audiences see that his upstanding place in society and his passionate treatment of his wife and children are motivated, not by love and affection, but by an interest to maintain his status in society. Later, when his wife Nora pleads with him not to dismiss Krogstad, his true nature is revealed. He does not care in the least for the feelings of his wife. What he does care about is how society will look upon his continued association with the fallen Krogstad. The following passage in Act II reveals his real motives for dismissing Krogstad:
And I hear he is a good worker, too. But I knew him when we were boys. It was one of those rash friendships that so often prove an incubus in afterlife. I may as well tell you plainly, we were once...
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