People in Love in Ibsen's a Doll's Annotated Bibliography

Total Length: 870 words ( 3 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 6

Page 1 of 3

People in Love in Ibsen's a Doll's House and Chopin's "The Story of an Hour"

Berkove, Lawrence I. "Fatal Self-Assertion in Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour" American

Literary Realism 32.2 (2000). Print. Berkove makes a very interesting point. Mrs.

Mallard's self-assertion does end her life. He argues that Louise Mallard is not a feminist heroine but "an immature egoist and a victim of her own extreme self-assertion" (10). His theory is that Louise is not a woman to look up to as a feminist icon, but a monstrous figure.

This article is useful in that most criticisms of both the Ibsen play and the Chopin story are from a feminist perspective. His argument is the direct opposite. He believes that Mrs. Mallard is too weak to face the reality of her imagination. When there is a challenge to her newly-found sense of self, she collapses.

Dagenhart, Natalia. "Freedom as a Sense of Life In Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour" Web.

Nov. 2010.

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What is different is in how the two women respond when they realize the position they have allowed themselves to be placed in. It is evident after reading this article that Mrs. Mallard was by far the weaker of the two women.

Harlow, Barbara. "From the Women's Prison: Third World." Feminist Studies 12.3 (1986).

Harlow compares the woman's existence in the late 19th century as a prison. In the hour she believed her husband dead, "Mrs. Mallard has lived and hour of liberation and dreamed an entire future of independence" (501). The realization that all this was impossible since her husband was not really dead is what kills her.

The crux of "A Story of an Hour" is in Mrs. Mallard's realization that her tears upon hearing of her husband's death are not ones of mourning, but of joy. Her husband's death means she is free to live life as she chooses. Unlike Ibsen's character Nora, Mrs. Mallard has not the strength to keep this freedom if challenged.

"The Social Significance of the Modern Drama: A Doll's House." Berkeley Digital Library

SunSITE. Web. 22 Nov. 2010. . The argument of this article is that the theme of A Doll's House is….....

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"People In Love In Ibsen's A Doll's", 22 November 2010, Accessed.14 May. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/people-love-ibsen-doll-122460