First published and premiered in 1879, 'A Doll's House' frames nineteenth-century confines for women in the literal borders of a family home. Nora is married with three children and is living out the male-dictated ideal for women at the time. As the play progresses, Henrik Ibsen challenges this notion by gradually suggesting that Nora is trapped in a role that will never grant her self-fulfilment.
Ibsen's portrayal of a free-thinking heroine and the play's dismissal of societal norms resulted in a controversial reception at the time of its release. 'A Doll's House' is now considered a crucial feminist text and Ibsen is regarded as instrumental in the development of Modernism and Realism in theatrical practice.
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