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A dolls house who helped raise nora?

Updated: 12/14/2022
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13y ago

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Nora's grandmother

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Q: A dolls house who helped raise nora?
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Related questions

Who is the doll in ibsens a dolls house?

Nora


What is the major issue in A Dolls House that Nora will be compelled to resolve?

stupid people


How did nora and Christine know each other in a dolls house?

In "A Doll's House," Nora and Christine were childhood friends. Christine Linde arrives in town seeking employment and reconnects with Nora, setting the stage for their relationship to develop further throughout the play.


Why did European audiences find the character nora in Henrik ibsen's a dolls house scandalous?

For leaving her husband and children


In A Doll's House who raised nora?

Nora was raised by Helmer, her father.


In the play A Dolls House What does Nora eat against Torvalds wishes?

Nora rebels against Torvlad's controlling ways, because she has always had the power within her to do so, though she may not have been fully aware of it. This is a precursor to her final rebellion against him: leaving him.


Why is freedom important in the play a dolls house?

because it is not until the awakening then transformation that Nora has been living under expectations. She wants to be able to be independent and by gaining the independence, Nora breaks free from Torvald and her family and into the real world. The real world of having to be on her own and only she can control and make decisions for herself. Overall, freedom shows Nora's growth.


A Dolls House According to Nora what would be the greatest miracle of all?

Turbans asked her if they could remain as strangers to each other and Nora replies 'that will be the greatest miracle' I believe that means that she would rather have them unaware of each other exstitance after she have lefted him


Why is nora dissatified with her life in the doll house?

Nora becomes dissatisfied and disillusioned because of her condescending husband.


Who raised Nora in A Doll's House?

The Nanny (Anne-Maria) proof- Act 2 Nora nervously sits alone on Christmas Day, holding onto her cloak, with her casual clothes on the couch. She nervously speaks to herself, hoping that nothing bad would happen, that people do not come to the party to ruin it (and her perfect life), and thinks of her children. She speaks with the nurse - Nanny - about her own life. Nora asks Nanny how she could leave her own children to come and raise her years ago. Nanny responds that raising Nora was such a wonderful opportunity for a poor girl and that she still keeps in touch with her own daughter. Nora nervously tells Nanny that if she were not around, she would want her to raise her three children. Nanny blows off such conversation as silly when the doorbell rings and Mrs. Linde arrives.


What is the climax in A Doll's House?

The title "A Doll's House," most simply, signifies the way the characters in the play all have certain roles to play, and maintain them, like a doll without free will. This is especially true of Nora. She is introduced as a helpless creature, as Torvald's "squirrel" and "skylark," completely under his control. She does not do or have anything without his permission, and does as she is told. She describes a similar relationship with her father as well, and so it is gradually understood that Nora is the "doll." To the men in her life, she has been nothing but a delicate showpiece, a thing of beauty to be admired but with no real purpose, with no thoughts or opinions of her own. Towards the end of the play she realizes this, telling Torvald about her father: "He used to call me his doll-child, and he played with me the way I played with my dolls," and "he told me all his opinions, so I had the same ones too." She then says that with Torvald it has been no different, and the title of the play becomes a metaphor for Nora, the house in which she has been a doll, a puppet, a plaything for the controlling men in her world, and her finally taking ownership and possession, and breaking out of her constraints to take hold of her own life.


In the play A Doll's House Mrs Christine Linde describes Nora as a child Is this assessment of Nora's behavior an accurate depiction?

No