Q: HEDDA ENJOYS BOTH MASCULINE AND FEMININE TRAITS IN HER BEING, WHICH MAKE HER ENTIRE PERSONALITY CONFUSING AND ENIGMATIC. HOW CAN YOU EXPLAIN THE VIEW?
Q: HEDDA ENJOYS BOTH MASCULINE AND FEMININE TRAITS IN
HER
BEING, WHICH MAKE HER ENTIRE PERSONALITY CONFUSING AND
ENIGMATIC. HOW CAN YOU EXPLAIN THE VIEW?
Q: HEDDA GABLER IS UNIQUE AND REBELLIOUS, WHY DOSE SHE
BEHAVE
SO
CONFUSINGLY?
Q: IN "HEDDA
GABLER" WE HAVE REVERSAL OF GENDER ROLE, WHAT
PURPOSE IT
SERVES IN THE PLOT OF THE PLAY?
Q: DESCRIBE THE CLASH OF VICTORIAN MORALITIES IN HEDDA GABLER.
Q: WHY HEDDA IS LUSTY FOR POWER?
Q: GIVE A CRITIQUE OF CHARACTER OF HEDDA GABLER.
Ans:
Henrik Ibsen portrays a microcosm of
nineteenth century Norwegian society in his play Hedda Gabler. Hedda, the
protagonist, exhibits a mixture of masculine and feminine traits due to her
unique upbringing under General Gabler and the social mores imposed upon her.
However, although this society venerates General Gabler because of his military
status, his daughter Hedda is not tolerated due to her non-conformity to the
accepted gender stereotypes.
Hedda's gender-inverted marriage to Jorgen
Tesman, her desire for power and her use of General Gabler's pistols are
unacceptable in her society and motif of "One doesn't do such a
thing!" that is alluded to during the play and expounded upon Hedda's
death that shows that Hedda's uncertain stance between masculine and feminine
gender roles and their associated traits is not tolerated by her society. Ibsen
employs a reversal of traditional gender roles within Hedda and Jorgen Tesman's
marriage to emphasise Hedda's masculine traits. Hedda displays no emotion or
affection towards her husband Jorgen. This appearance of indifference is a
trait that is usually common to men:
Tesman: ”My old morning shoes. My slippers look!...I
missed them dreadfully.
Now you should see
them, Hedda. "
Hedda: No thanks, it really doesn't interest
me".
In another gender role reversal, Hedda
displays a financial awareness, which her husband, Jorgen does not posses.
Although Brack corresponds with Tesman about his honeymoon travels, he
corresponds with Hedda concerning the financial matters. This is a role that is
usually reserved for men. Hedda does not only display traits, which are
definitively masculine, or feminine, she also objects to and often defies the
conventions established for her gender by society. She rejects references to
her pregnancy as a reminder of her gender:
Tesman: "Have you noticed how plump (Hedda's)
grown, and how well she is?
How much she's filled
out on our travels?"
Hedda: "Oh be quiet!"
Hedda is reminded not only of her feminine
role of mother and nurturer here, but also as wife and "appendage" to
Tesman: "And to think is was you who carried off Hedda Gabler! The lovely
Hedda GablerL.now that you have got the wife your heart
was set on." As a woman of the haute bourgeoisie,
Hedda is "sought after" and "always had so many admirers"
and has been "acquired" by Tesman as hide wife.
Hedda resents the gender conventions that dictate that she
now "belongs" to the Tesman family - a situation that would not occur
were she a man:
Tesman: "Only it seems to me now that you
belong to the family..."
Hedda: "Well,
I really don't know... "
Although these traits displayed by Hedda
are masculine, they are not those, which her society cannot tolerate. To
entertain herself in her "boring" marriage she plays with her
father's, General Gabler's, pistols:
Hedda: "Sometimes I think I only have a talent
for one thing...boring myself to
death!" "I still have one thing
to kill time with. My pistols, Jorgen. General Gabler's pistols"
Jorgen: "For goodness' sake! Hedda darling!
Don't touch those dangerous things!
For my sake, Hedda!"
These pistols are a symbol of masculinity
and are associated with war, a pastime that women are excluded from other than
in the nurturing role of nurses and are thus not tolerated by society. Tesman
implores Hedda to cease playing with them, but even his "superior"
position, as her husband does not dissuade Hedda, who is found to be playing
with them by Brack at the beginning of act two. Brack also reminds Hedda of the
inappropriate nature of her "entertainment" and physically takes the
pistols away from Hedda.
Hedda: "I'm going to shoot you sir!"
Brack: "No, no, no! Now stop this
nonsense!" taking the pistol gently out of her
hand. If you don't mind, my dear lady....
Because we're not going to play that game any more today."
As a parallel to Hedda's masculine game of
playing with General Gabler's pistols, Hedda plays the traditionally female
role of a "minx" with Brack.
Hedda: "Doesn't it feel like a whole
eternity since we last talked to each other?"
Brack: "Not like this, between ourselves?
Alone together, you mean?"
Hedda: "Yes, more or less that"
Brack: "Here was I, every blessed day,
wishing to goodness you were home
again"
"And there was I, the whole time,
wishing exactly the same"
At the beginning of act two, Hedda encourages Brack's
flirtation with her by telling him the true nature of her marriage to Tesman
that it is a marriage of convenience:
"But, tell me...I don't quite see
why, in that case...er..."
"Why Jorgen and I ever made a match
of it, you mean? "I had simply danced myself out, my dear sir. My time was
up."
Brack is emboldened by Hedda's seeming
availability and pursues the notion of a "triangular relationship"
with Hedda. Not only does Hedda's "coquettish" behaviour towards
Brack exhibits the feminine side of her nature, it also demonstrates that in
some instances she conforms to society's expectations of females. Hedda's reference
to "(her) time (being) up" shows the socially accepted view that
women must marry, because they are not venerated as spinsters.
By conforming to this aspect of her
society's mores and marrying before she becomes a socially unacceptable
spinster, Hedda demonstrates that she is undeniably female and accepts this.
Hedda's constantly seeks power over those people she comes in contact with. As
a woman, she has no control over society at large, and thus seeks to influence
the characters she comes into contact with in an emulation of her father's
socially venerated role as a general. Hedda pretends to
have been friends with Thea in order to solicit her confidence:
Thea: "But that's the last thing in the
world I wanted to talk about!"
Hedda: "Not to me, dear? After all, we
were at school together."
Thea: "Yes, but you were a class above
me. How dreadfully frightened of you I
was in those
days!"
Once Hedda learns of Thea's misgivings
about Lovborg's newfound resolve, she uses it to destroy their "comradeship".
Hedda: "Now you see for yourself! There's
not the slightest need for you to go
about in this deadly
anxiety..."
Lovborg: "So it was deadly anxiety ...on my
behalf."
Thea: "Softly and in misery] Oh, Hedda!
How could you?"
Lovborg: "So this was my comrade's absolute
faith in me."
Hedda then manipulates Lovborg, by
challenging his masculinity, into going to Brack's bachelor party and resuming
his drunken ways of old. Hedda's "reward" for this is to find that
Lovborg's manuscript, his and Thea's "child" falls into her hands,
where she burns it, thus destroying the child and alto the relationship, both
of which Hedda was jealous of. Similarly, Hedda seeks to push her husband,
Jorgen, into politics: "(I was wondering) whether I could get my husband to
go into politics..." This would raise Hedda's social standing and allow
her to attain and maintain power. Hedda's manipulation of people in order to
attain power is a trait that is stereotypically predominant in men.
The society of nineteenth century Norway
venerates the image of submissive, static passive and pure women. Roles of
power are normally allocated to men in such a society. The society in Hedda
Gabler demonstrates its intolerance of Hedda's masculine behaviour by
contributing to her death. Hedda is found to be playing with her pistols in act
two by Brack. After disgracing himself and returning to his "immoral"
ways at Hedda's behest, Lovborg is manipulated by Hedda into "taking his
life beautifully" and she gives him one of General Gabler's pistols.
However Lovborg dies from an accidental wound to the stomach rather than a
patrician death from a bullet to the head and Brack, utilising his position of
power within the judicial system, sees the pistol that he accidentally killed
himself with. Recognising it as being General Gabler's pistol, he returns to
Hedda to stake his claim. Hedda refuses to be in the power of Brack, she had
been "heartily thankful that (he had) no power over (her)" however,
her fear is realised as Brack attempts to force his way into a "triangular
relationship" with Hedda (and Tesman) in return for not exposing the
scandal that she had provided Lovborg with the instrument of his death. Hedda
is "as fearful of scandal as all that" and takes her life, ironically
avoiding the scandal surrounding Lovborg's death and yet causing a scandal
concerning her own. Hedda's masculine preference for the pistols to any
feminine task of housekeeping and her fear of scandal due to not conforming
with society's accepted gender roles leads her to kill herself, thus
demonstrating that things which "one doesn't do" are not tolerated by
her society of nineteenth century Norway.
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