РефератыИностранный языкChChekhov And Ibsen Essay Research Paper A

Chekhov And Ibsen Essay Research Paper A

Chekhov And Ibsen Essay, Research Paper


A play serves as the author’s tool for critiquing society. One rarely encounters


the ability to transcend accepted social beliefs. These plays reflect


controversial issues that the audience can relate to because they interact in


the same situations every day. As late nineteenth century playwrights point out


the flaws of mankind they also provide an answer to the controversy. Unknowingly


the hero or heroine solves the problem at the end of the play and indirectly


sends a message to the audience on how to solve their own problem. Henrik Ibsen


and Anton Chekov both provide unique analysis on issues their culture never


thought as wrong. In the play A Doll’s House Ibsen tackles women’s rights as a


matter of importance being neglected. In his play he acknowledges the fact that


in nineteenth century European life the role of the women was to stay home,


raise the children, and attend to her husband. Chekov illustrates the role of a


dysfunctional family and how its members are effected. Both of the


aforementioned problems are solved through the playwrights’ recommendations and


the actions of the characters. In the plays A Doll’s House and Uncle Vanya the


authors use realism to present a problem and solution to controversial societal


issues. While both plays mainly concentrate on the negative aspects of culture,


there are positive facets explored by the playwrights. In A Doll’s House Henrik


Ibsen focuses on the lack of power and authority given to women, but through


Nora we also see the strength and willpower masked by her husband Torvald. To


save her husband’s life Nora secretly forges her father’s signature and receives


a loan to finance a trip to the sea. Nora’s naivety of the law puts her in a


situation that questions her morality and dedication. Nora is not aware that


under the law she is a criminal. She believes that her forgery is justified


through her motive. She is not a criminal like Krogstad because his crime was


simply a moral failing and not for the good of his family. A morally unjustified


crime is the only type of crime. Nora’s believes that her love for her husband


is what propelled her to sign her father’s name and pass it off as his own.


Nora’s motive is to save her husband’s life and keeping it secret is to save him


from pain and humiliation. If he knew, it would hurt his "manly


independence" (p. 22) and upset Nora and Torvald’s "mutual


relations" (p.22). Nora knows that without forging her father’s signature


she would not be able to save her husband. Nora uses her wit to find a way to be


able to overcome the shackles placed on her by society and get enough money to


save Torvald’s life. In Uncle Vanya Chekov ends the play with Sonya and Uncle


Vanya returning to their normal lifestyle and forgetting about the upset


Serebryakov and Elena’s presence creates. Sonya protests that she and her uncle


"will bear patiently bear the trials fate sends" (Chekov p. 230) and


"work for others" (p. 230). Sonya sacrifices her own happiness for


that of her father and stepmother. Sonya exudes every positive trait that


society contains. She sacrifices her life to work for her father without


questioning his motives for leaving. She dedicates herself to her family and


overlooks their flaws to help them. Sonya, Uncle Vanya, and Nora’s make


sacrifices for the love of their family members and do so without questions. The


sacrifices made by the positive characters are far outweighed by the actions of


their counterparts. Torvald sees Nora’s only role as being the subservient and


loving wife. He refers to Nora as "my little squirrel" (Ibsen p.12),


"song-bird" (p. 33) or "skylark" (p. 40). To him, she is


only a possession. Torvald calls Nora by pet-names and speaks down to her


because he thinks that she is not intelligent and that she can not think on her


own. Whenever she begins to voice an opinion Torvald quickly drops the pet-names


and insults her as a women. When Nora asks if he can reinstate Krogstad at the


bank he claims that she only asks because she fears that he will suffer the same


fate as her father. Nora realizes that living with Torvald prevents her from


being a real person. He treats her as a doll because that is what he wants. He


does not want a wife who w

ill challenge him with her own thoughts and actions.


The final confrontation between the couple involves more oppression by Torvald,


but by this time Nora has realized the situation he wishes to maintain. Torvald


calls her "childish" (p. 70) and "ungrateful" (p. 68) even


though she saved his life. Nora expected Torvald to be grateful to her, when


this does not happen she decides that the only way to fix the situation is to


leave him and her children and find herself independently. Nora wants Torvald to


take the blame for the forgery and realize that how he treats her is not the way


a husband should treat his wife. When he doesn’t take the blame she knows that


independence is the only answer and so she leaves. The oppression of women


caused many women to believe that their duty in life was only to be a wife.


Ibsen provides a narrative on one woman’s plight to find her purpose in life. In


Uncle Vanya the wrong that is committed is not directed toward one character,


but two. Serebryakov dumps the burden of his lifestyle onto his daughter and


brother-in-law. Only at the end of Serebryakov’s and Elena’s stay at the family


estate is it realized that everyone is miserable. Elena who has been married


into this family is the only person who at once comprehends her unhappiness.


Sonya tells her stepmother that she is "so happy" (Chekov p. 201).


Sonya has yet to grasp that her father only leaves her at the estate to help


make money so he can finance his expensive lifestyle. Serebryakov is concerned


with his position in society. He marries a young and beautiful woman and tries


to move ahead in life using money. He ignores emotions, even the misery that he


feels. In the late nineteenth century rank was determined by who one married and


how much money one’s family had. Serebryakov exemplifies this lifestyle by only


trying to move ahead in society to the point of sacrificing anything to get to


the to top, even his daughter. These two families point out societies flawed


traditions and the subsequent effect upon these people. In presenting these


problems the authors end their plays with a solution to the characters’


unhappiness. Ibsen was the first author in Europe to tackle the issue of women’s


place in the world and label it as wrong. Nora’s realization of Torvald’s part


in her misery allows her to leave him. She does not fully blame Torvald for her


unhappiness, but she knows that she can’t be happy with him. Her expectation of


"the most wonderful thing" (Ibsen p. 72) leaves her with the knowledge


that Torvald will never change. Nora becomes cognizant of the mistreatment she


has endured, and consequently leaves to become someone different. Ibsen


encourages women to make a change by taking action and not to watch their life


pass by unfulfillingly. Nora becomes a role model for change. Chekov on the


other hand does not solve his characters’ problem in Uncle Vanya. He ends the


play where it began, without resolution. Sonya and Uncle Vanya take on the


burden of running the estate for Serebryakov without reimbursement while he


lives abroad and enjoys the riches of life. Uncle Vanya cries while Sonya talks


about how hard they will work for her father and expect nothing in return.


Unlike Nora, Sonya accepts her life and does not make any change. She does not


even try to change the family in which she was born . She believes that if she


does what is asked of her she will be rewarded in afterlife. Chekov lets Sonya


further entrench herself in the problem. The audience knows from Uncle Vanya’s


tears that Sonya’s decision is not the right one. In A Doll’s House and Uncle


Vanya the audience gathers a picture of what it was like to live in the late


eighteen hundreds. This picture is not a positive one. More wrongs are committed


against the characters of these plays than any sort of reward for the hardships


they endure. These plays reflect an accurate representation of the society that


existed when they were written. Nora and Sonya find that they are trapped in a


world that they do not belong in. Nora finds a way out and Sonya waits for a new


world to come along and rescue her. Society oppressed both families by masking


the truth of their lives for so long. Chekov and Ibsen contribute to the


solution by providing their plays as examples of why Europe was wrong.

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