Read the passage from A Doll’s House.

Nora: Speak low. Suppose Torvald were to hear! He mustn't on any account—no one in the world must know, Christine, except you.

Mrs. Linde: But what is it?

Nora: Come here. [Pulls her down on the sofa beside her.] Now I will show you that I too have something to be proud and glad of. It was I who saved Torvald's life.

Mrs. Linde: "Saved"? How?

Nora: I told you about our trip to Italy. Torvald would never have recovered if he had not gone there—

Mrs. Linde: Yes, but your father gave you the necessary funds.

Nora: [smiling] Yes, that is what Torvald and all the others think, but—

Mrs. Linde: But—

Nora: Papa didn't give us a shilling. It was I who procured the money.

How does the author develop a social issue in this passage?

A. by introducing the conflict that Nora is proud of her accomplishment but has to keep it secret
B. by introducing the conflict that Nora’s father loaned them the money to save Torvald’s life
C. by showing that a long-term stay in Italy made Torvald healthier and thus saved his life
D. by showing that Torvald would not have recovered on his own if he had not received help from others

Respuesta :

The answer is A)  by introducing the conflict that Nora is proud of her accomplishment but has to keep it secret

The author develop a social issue in this passage by:

Option A

  • By introducing the conflict that Nora is proud of her accomplishment but has to keep it secret.

Nora  is crafty yet honest, hesitant and shaky yet amazingly fearless, helpless yet wildly free and manipulative and cryptic at the outset however intense and direct towards the end that is how author have created the conflict in between her.

The principle subjects of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House rotate around the qualities and the issues of late nineteenth century bourgeoisie, to be specific what looks proper. The worth of cash, and the manner in which ladies explore a scene that passes on them little space to champion themselves as real individuals

Doll's House was regularly restricted was on the grounds that it was gruffly reprimanding the real society of the time, and not on the grounds that it was unethical or profane. Presumably, it reprimanded the absence of equity and humankind in the treatment of ladies like Laura Kieler during the late nineteenth century.

The doll's home itself is an image of the Burnell family's cultural position. At the point when it is brought into the Burnell yard, it turns out to be, in a real sense, a house inside a house, a reflection of the Burnell's home.

As the character of nora is tricky yet legit, reluctant and unstable yet incredibly daring, defenseless yet stunningly free and manipulative and obscure at the beginning anyway extreme and direct towards the end which symolise the comparition of her character with different objects which created the conflict in her character in the story.

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