YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Neurosis in The Awakening by Kate Chopin Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen and Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
Essays 241 - 270
In 5 pages this paper examines the feminist aspects of these plays in an analysis of the plot structures of each. There are no ot...
In four pages this paper examines how the playwright represents social issues in this 19th century dramatic play....
In five pages this paper discusses how in this short story Kate Chopin depicts sexuality as a force of nature rather than as a pas...
In seven pages this paper compares protagonists in each play in a consideration of what they reveal about women's roles. Two sour...
This paper addresses the ways in which Ibsen's social, literary work, A Doll's House provides a retrospective of feminist ideology...
Both works focus on an important racial figure as a primary element in the development of the plot. The relationship between Huck...
In five pages this paper presents an analysis of this short story in terms of how imagery, similes, foreshadowing and parallelism ...
In five pages this paper examines how humiliation is used as a theme in Ibsen's play and Hawthorne's novel. Two sources are cited...
In five pages this paper considers the way these playwrights revealed social criticism through the irony of their respective plays...
to her on the basis of her sex. To further complicate her situation, she was an exile from her primitive Colchis homeland, forced...
of "Desirees Baby," Teresa Gibert observed, "The number and the intensity of the surprises that provoke astonishment in the highly...
of Norway. Interestingly, Ibsen observed a year before the completion of A Dolls House in his text Notes for a Modern Tragedy, "T...
accident in 1855. According to biographer Emily Toth, subsequent photographs of Katherine OFlaherty Chopin reveal an individual t...
She was viciously attacked for her frank depiction of a woman who broke her marriage vows, despite the fact that the book is a psy...
53). However, when he discovers Nora and her involvement in certain business matters, he is forced to realize that she has done fa...
Myop finds herself in a "gloomy" little cove. This striking change in imagery foreshadows Myops discovery of a decomposing body. ...
fated to her status in life" (Lombardi). It is a moralistic fable written in the tradition of the ancient Greeks in which the her...
front panel." Kozierok (2001) also explains that the term "external drive bay" is a "bit of a misnomer" in that the term ex...
has been troubled for some time and they, at that instant, feel they would do anything to change it if only she would stay. But, t...
shall my purpose work on him" (Shakespeare I iii). From there on out we begin to realize that we, as the audience, are the only on...
do him wrong. She is all but banished and ends up marrying into wealth and power in another region of the continent. Still she sid...
makes the story powerful is that hour where the woman sits alone. And watching her character develop and learn is what makes the t...
position in the court was not higher than it was. He is the source of all conflict in the story for he presents Othello with subtl...
were twittering in the eaves"(Chopin). The other indication that she will be experiencing an ambivalence toward his death is...
beneath, the concept of such themes will satisfy most readers and explicators of fiction, there may be hidden, deeper meanings in ...
until it breaks. This inner storm mirrors the outer storm which brings Calixta and Alcee together. "When he touched her breasts t...
his arms. She was a revelation in that dim, mysterious chamber; as white as the couch she lay upon. Her firm, elastic flesh that w...
As the race of the infant becomes more obvious, its race being obviously partially African, she becomes confused. Her husband bera...
(Chopin). This image clearly drives home the fact that the heart was a symbol, a symbol of her confinement and of her hope. The he...
many women who watched this play and related well to Nora, though they were perhaps in a position where they would never speak out...