In the dramas, A Doll House by Henrik Ibsen and Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, protagonists, Nora, and Willy portray thematic concerns as they both fail to understand the reality and hoax themselves in others into believing false actions and statements in their lives. In A Doll House by Henrik Ibsen, the protagonist Nora pretends to be the “perfect” housewife to herself, her husband, friends, and family, although when in reality she is not and is preventing lies from being revealed to her husband. A similar theme is also portrayed in Arthur Miller’s, Death of a Salesman with the protagonist Willy, a sixty-three year old salesman who deludes himself into thinking he is successful salesman and attempts to deceive his family and friends into believing he is a successful salesman too. Both protagonists, feel as they need to conceal their true lives in order to properly fulfill and succeed in the gender roles of a family household. In A Doll House by Henrik …show more content…
Nora tends to be money hungry and always wants to spend money, so if she wants to get money or get Torvald agree with her, she will refer to herself with the dehumanizing and belittling nicknames that Torvald gives her like “squirrel”, “lark, or “Little Nora”. This shows that despite the fact that Nora does try and pretend to be the role as the perfect housewife, she pretends while she undermines her own husband. Nora, also gets Torvald to hire her friend Mrs. Linde and although Torvald hires her, he has to fire one of his employees named Krogstad. By the cause of this, it is revealed that Nora’s big secret is that she borrowed money from Krogstad and he has evidence and information that Nora forged her dad’s signature after he died to get the loan. This shows that even though Nora seems to pretend to be the role of a perfect housewife to her husband, she is not a perfect