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13 August, 20:40

Krogstad: But, tell me, wasn't it for that very purpose that you asked me to meet you here?

Mrs. Linde: In my first moment of fright, it was. But twenty-four hours have elapsed since then, and in that time I have witnessed incredible things in this house. Helmer must know all about it. This unhappy secret must be disclosed; they must have a complete understanding between them, which is impossible with all this concealment and falsehood going on.

Krogstad: Very well, if you will take the responsibility. But there is one thing I can do in any case, and I shall do it at once.

WHAT widely accepted archetype of the late 1800s does this text challenge?

1) the man as a ruler

2) the man as a trickster

3) the women as a mother

4) the mother as a caregiver

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  1. 13 August, 21:05
    0
    2) the man as a trickster.

    Explanation:

    This question refers to an excerpt from act 3 of A Doll's House.

    It appears that Krogstad thinks more about his notoriety than all else. Rebuffed by society for his demonstration of falsification, he is edgy to recover decency according to other people. In any case, his discussion with Mrs. Linde in the third demonstration demonstrates to him that he will just accomplish bliss through genuinely transforming himself and recovering the individual uprightness that he lost instead of the outward decency. Thus to Nora, Krogstad discovers that society's perspective on him is useless on the off chance that he doesn't regard himself as a person.
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