Thanks to the benefactors of our sister who lived as a missionary in Russia long ago, I watched a Korean version of “A Doll’s House” produced by promising Russian director Yury Butusov in November. “A Doll’s House” was performed in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the foundation of Seoul Arts Center in Korea.
Even though “A Doll’s House” was written by Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906) in Norway
in 1879, this three-act play is still significant. It was the most frequently
performed play in the year 2006 marking the 100th anniversary of the death
of Henrik Ibsen.
Manuscripts signed by Ibsen were registered to UNESCO in 2001 because of his
plays’ historical significance as the beginning of modern theater.
“A Doll’s House” questions the traditional roles of men and women in
19th-century marriage. The protagonist of this play, Nora undergoes the process
of self-realization in search of the true identity of women.
The image of a woman coming out of the house to be independent was scandalous
in the 19th century, but the play as a whole implies a spiritual transformation
from a passive doll-like person to a positive and creative person.
Nora, the wife of Torvald Helmer and mother of three children, lived the ideal life
and did her best to dedicate herself to the love of her husband. This love even
led her to forge a signature on a loan application to help her sick husband.
Torvald, a newly promoted bank manager, is fond of calling his wife “my little
skylark” or “my little squirrel.” The image of a skylark or of a squirrel
reveals a patriarchal sense of authority in a male-dominated world. The moral
and perfect husband regards Nora’s habits of shopping and eating cookies as
being shallow-minded.
Going through an internal conflict due to her false signature on the promissory
note, Nora realizes her father treated her as a doll. Looking back, she wasn’t
able to assert herself or argue about anything in front of her father.
Furthermore, her husband also regarded her as a doll without any opinion or
will at all. She just needed the presence of men near her and followed them
without question.
.
As a result, Helmers’ married life turned out to be a prison where
strangers lived together without true love. This dynamic is revealed through
Torvald’s criticism of his wife’s mistake. Instead of understanding the
intention of his wife, he just condemned her, and his act of understanding and
forgiveness came too late.
-“I have waited so patiently for eight years; for, goodness knows, I knew very
well those wonderful things don’t happen every day. Then this horrible
misfortune came upon me… Ah, Torvald, the most wonderful thing of all would
have to happen.”
-“Tell me what that would be!”
-“Both you and I would have to be so changed that… Oh, Torvald, I don’t believe
any longer in wonderful things happening.”
-“But I will believe in it. Tell me! So changed that…?”
-“That our life together would be a real wedlock. Goodbye.”
-“Nora! Nora! … Empty. She is gone… The most wonderful thing of all…?”
On the other hand, Nora’s friends, Kristine Linde and Nils Krogstad, could
recover their relationship after ups and downs, but Nora needs some quality
time desperately to calm herself down.
This contemporary era is quite different from the times of Nora, but it would
be worth questioning if we live in another form of dollhouse surrounded by
cybots and artificial intelligence that bring the most convenient but
dehumanized benefits of ultra-tech, which will lose power during a blackout.
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2018/12/162_259989.html
Dec 11 online/ offline on Dec 12, 2018
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