*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
About The Book
Description
Author
<p><strong>Nora Helmer seems to live inside a comfortable marriage but the security around her has been built on secrecy debt fear and illusion.</strong> In <em>A Doll's House</em> Henrik Ibsen turns an ordinary middle-class home into the setting for one of the most famous confrontations in modern drama. As Nora's hidden sacrifice for her husband comes dangerously close to exposure the roles of wife mother husband provider and moral authority begin to collapse under the pressure of truth.</p><p>The play shocked nineteenth-century audiences because it refused to treat domestic life as a private refuge beyond serious examination. Ibsen exposes the power imbalance inside a respectable marriage the legal and social limitations placed on women and the way affection can become possession when one person is denied full moral independence. Nora's awakening is not simple rebellion but a painful recognition that she has been treated as a charming child rather than as a complete human being.</p><p>First performed in 1879 <em>A Doll's House</em> remains one of the central works of modern theater. Its influence reaches across feminist literature realism social drama family drama and psychological drama and its final scene is still one of the most discussed endings in world drama. For readers and students interested in women's rights marriage individual freedom social respectability and the birth of modern realistic drama Ibsen's play remains urgent unsettling and remarkably alive.</p>