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The document compares Shakespeare's Macbeth and Ibsen's Hedda Gabler, analyzing the characters of Lady Macbeth and Hedda Gabler from a 21st century radical feminism perspective.

Macbeth and Hedda Gabler

21st century radical feminism perspective

Journal of Educational and Social Research

MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy

ISSN 2239-978X
ISSN 2240-0524

Vol. 4 No.4
June 2014

Shakespeare and Ibsen: A Comparative Study of Macbeth and Hedda


Gabler from 21st Century Radical Feminism Perspective
Arburim Iseni, PhD
Department of English Language and Literature
Faculty of Philology. State University of Tetova, Tetova, Macedonia.

Liljana Siljanovska, PhD


Department of International Communication, Faculty of Languages, Cultures and Communications
South East European University Tetova, Macedonia.

Vlera Ejupi, PhD


Department of English Language, Faculty of Languages, Cultures and Communications
South East European University Tetova, Macedonia.

Amir Hossain, PhD


Department of English, IBAIS University,
(International Business Administration and Information System)
Uttara Unit, Dhaka.
Doi:10.5901/jesr.2014.v4n4p30
Abstract
In this paper, our purpose is to depict the feminist message as articulated in Shakespeares Macbeth and Ibsens Hedda
Gabler by portraying Lady Macbeth and Hedda Gabler who are representatives of Elizabethan England and the 19th century
Scandinavian Bourgeois society and culture respectively. Through these female protagonists, both dramatists wanted to
expose their contemporary situation of the female community. Both Hedda and Lady Macbeth have raised a fiery voice or
initiated a dreadful revolution against the patriarchal rule, power, and domination with a view to attaining self-pelf, self-power,
and self-domination. In these two plays, both Shakespeare and Ibsen have prioritized the female identity, revolt, and
dominance more than the male order and custom. This paper also aims to discuss the character of Lady Macbeth as the
matriarchal influence upon the patriarchy, the ambitious crime, womans idea upon masculinity, Lady Macbeths effort to
repudiate womanhood, her femininity versus her unnatural resolve, her fear and remorse, her sleep-walking; Hedda is also
viewed as a maladjusted, neurotic, unfulfilled, unnatural woman, full of nervous energy and longings-gliding to irresistible selfdestruction. Here, I have tried to highlight the critical judgments of several critics based on the character-analysis of the two
powerful female protagonists. Considering the femme fatale characters of Shakespeare and Ibsen, the most renowned and
powerful playwrights writing in English and Norwegian language respectively, especially the powerful and domineering female
protagonists cum heroines, Lady Macbeth and Hedda Gabler, this paper proposes to draw attention to the play-texts of both
dramatists as the embodiment of the 21st century radical feminism as well.
Keywords: "Lady Macbeth", "Hedda Gabler", Shakespeare, Ibsen, and Post-Feminism

1. Introduction
Both Shakespeare and Ibsen are the most powerful and well-known playwrights in the history of English Literature.
Shakespeare is the dramatist of the Elizabethan England and Ibsen, the dramatist of the 19th century Scandinavia. As
dramatic artists, both of them have earned popularity and reputation around the universe. Their plays have been
translated, performed and transfigured in many parts of the universe. We sense that their attitudes, in writing plays, differ
in many ways, especially societal, political, economic, familial, feministic questions and so on. In this paper, our
psychology is to focus on feministic message as articulated in the powerful female characters, Lady Macbeth in Macbeth
and Hedda Gabler in Hedda Gabler respectively. Here, I will let you know Shakespeare and Ibsen as dramatists;
analytical character-study of Lady Macbeth and Hedda Gabler along with literary criticism; comparative and contrastive
study between these powerful women from feminism perspective in a sequential manner.



ISSN 2239-978X
ISSN 2240-0524

Journal of Educational and Social Research


MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy

Vol. 4 No.4
June 2014

Shakespeares greatness and pre-eminence as a dramatist are universally recognized. Every element of his drama
might, in isolation, be matched by the best of his contemporaries. What is distinctive concerning Shakespeare is his
combination of all gifts which were scattered in the works of other playwrights of his time. He is superior to others by his
many sided curiosity and extreme diversity of his talent. His genius is flexible to a marvelous degree. He adapted himself
to the most diverse material and seemed to use it all with equal skill and enthusiasm. His great tragedy, Macbeth is
distinguished by such astonishing variety of kind, presentment, and dramatic movement that hardly any one formula fits
them all. He shows equal aptitude for the tragic and the comic, the sentimental and the burlesque, lyrical fantasy and
character-study, portraits of female and of male.
Shakespeare's representation of women, and the ways in which his female roles are interpreted and enacted, have
become topics of scholarly interest. His heroines encompass a wide range of characterizations and types. Within the
gallery of female characters, Shakespeare's women characters display great intelligence, vitality, and a strong sense of
personal independence. These qualities have led some critics to consider Shakespeare a champion of womankind and
an innovator who departed sharply from flat, stereotyped characterizations of women common to his contemporaries and
earlier dramatists. Contrastingly, other commentators note that even Shakespeare's most favorably portrayed women
possess characters that are tempered by negative qualities. They suggest that Shakespeare was not free of misogynistic
tendencies that were deeply seated in the culture of his country and era. William Shakespeare lived during the
Elizabethan era and wrote all his works based on the society of that time. The Elizabethan era was a time when women
were portrayed to be weaker than men. During that time, it was said that women are to be seen, and not heard. In this
paper, an attempt has been taken to explore Shakespeares presentation of woman, Lady Macbeth in his tragedy,
Macbeth demonstrating his philosophical viewpoints concerning woman and domineering roles in the male dominated
society of the Elizabethan England.
Henrik Ibsen (20 March 1828-23 May 1906) was a major 19th century Norwegian playwright of the realistic plays.
Ibsen is often referred to as the father of modern drama and is one of the founders of modernism in the theatre. Ibsen is
held to be the greatest of Norwegian author, celebrated as a national symbol by Norwegians, and one of the most
important playwrights of all time, and many regard him as a feminist author. His plays can be viewed as a gallery of
portrait of various kinds of male and female through being trapped in societal realism and caught in the triviality of human
life while struggling to seek out truth and freedom. Among Ibsens dramatic roles, the unusual Scandinavian women of
strong characters are marked with great devotion towards their ideals and enormous resolution in pursuit of individual
freedom and existence. They are actually bold, rebellious and revolutionary women warriors with independent and
intelligent psychology and aspiration for the spiritual emancipation.
With their strong personalities, women are usually doomed to be trapped in a male centered society where they
are deprived of the basic right as human beings in its full sense. Ibsen has insightfully described a range of rebellious
characters and unveiled the spiritual pilgrimage; they have gone through in their persistent pursuit of emancipation,
freedom and in their bitter struggle to regain their identity as human beings. It was Ibsen who gave women a vigorous and
fairy voice by creating the powerful women characters including Nora Helmer in A Dolls House (1879), Mrs. Alving in
Ghosts (1881), Rebecca West in Rosmersholm (1886), and Hedda Gabler in Hedda Gabler(1890) with a view to breaking
conventional custom and conservatism, and to focus on how women lagged behind male.
Henrik Ibsens Hedda Gabler is one of the most criticized feminist plays, where the dramatist has explored a
difference between patriarchy and matriarchy of the 19th century Scandinavian Bourgeois society. And, Ibsen has
emphasized much more on matriarchal power and domination than patriarchal system and order. According to many, the
female protagonist, Hedda Gabler is viewed as femme fatale character. Being based on her character, this paper aims at
finding out the power structure of Hedda in the play, Hedda Gabler. From the very beginning, Hedda has possessed both
the characteristics of a rebellious personality and those of an ordinary angel like woman. She is a more pronounced type
of the perverse erotic or anti-social woman than Ibsen has ever created.
Now, we will uphold Lady Macbeths personality on whom many critics and scholars have commented in many
ways:
2. Lady Macbeth
The historical records reveal that the position of women in the society was extremely miserable. Women occupied a very
inferior position and were always oppressed. It was a natural phenomenon and practiced in every house-whether rich or
poor. Shakespeare, the greatest dramatist, observed it very minutely and represented it carefully in his works.
Shakespeare shows the powerful aspect of a female character, Lady Macbeth in his famous tragedy, Macbeth. According
to Virginia Woolf, Shakespeare is the writer who made his writings transparent and free of any personal vices for



ISSN 2239-978X
ISSN 2240-0524

Journal of Educational and Social Research


MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy

Vol. 4 No.4
June 2014

delineating the women characters in his tragedies, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth. Shakespeare, with his
extraordinary genius for portraying human behavior, depicts the condition of women in a patriarchal society and his
women characters who in their richness transcend the limitations of time and Shakespearean theme becomes the
legendary.
In Macbeth, Lady Macbeth is one of the most confusing and intriguing in all of Shakespeares women. Directors
and actors cannot even agree as to whether or not she is a prominent character, as she disappears after the banquet
scene not to reappear until the infamous sleepwalking scene. Lady Macbeths disruption to the political culture stems
from her ambition, and this virulent ambition is made highly unnatural by her gender. When she reads Macbeths
revelation of the Witches predictions, she immediately assumes that only her insistence will lead Macbeth actively to
pursue and acquire the desired kingly position of power and authority. Lady Macbeth claims an ability to wield the
character of Macbeth to her purposes and goals. Tennenhouse describes her characterization in influential political terms:
At the outset of Macbeth, Shakespeare gives Lady Macbeth the very same elements which other Jacobean playwrights
use to display the absolute power of the state. He shows how these might be used subversively (Das 46). Certainly,
Lady Macbeths suggestions are subversive that she leads her husband into murdering the rightful, current monarch in
their home. With this ploy, she assumes the absolute power of the state by acting as if she were accountable to none and
deserves no censure. She rises to the throne only by the virtue or vice of her husbands ascension as king, and yet, her
insistence provides the impetus for the power base. Thus, Lady Macbeth exemplifies a negative symbol of female
ambition and power from the Renaissance perspective. In considering Lady Macbeths characterization, one must
remember, first and foremost, that feminine desires for power were seen as unnatural. In fact, Shakespeare couches
these desires in emasculating terms to give them increased gravity. Lady Macbeth repudiates her femininity for power:
Come you spirits
That tends on mortal thoughts, unsex me here;
And fill me, from the crown to the toe, top-full
Of direst cruelty! (I.v.40-43)

When Lady Macbeth desires to be unsexed, her words reveal the assumed discordance between feminine nature
and political ambition. By putting these desires in masculine or gender-neutral form, Lady Macbeth explicitly suggests
their unnaturalness. Shakespeares language here induces tension and reflects the political gender tensions already
existent in the Elizabethan world. Wallace MacCaffrey comments upon this disparity between femininity and political
strength in the biography of Elizabeth I: For a woman the demands made on the occupant of the throne were supremely
difficult to meet, since the characteristic qualities which a monarch was expected to display were largely masculine (Das
46). While Lady Macbeth wishes to be unsexed, Elizabeth asserted the title King as frequently as Queen and sought to
establish her own power by transcending the gender issue. Nonetheless, as Levin notes, not even Elizabeth could
escape her femininity: Elizabeth might incorporate both male and female in her sovereignty, but her body was a very
human female one and, hence to both Elizabeth herself and to her people, an imperfect one (Das 46). Just as Elizabeth
had difficulty asserting political authority as a woman, and thus adopted male gender characteristics, Shakespeare defeminizes Lady Macbeth. His representation of women in his tragedy upholds her ambitious credibility. Such unnatural
positioning created tension in the play and reflected anxiety in the Elizabethan world.
Shakespeare pushes Lady Macbeths oddity so far as to reverse Macbeths gender roles. In the play, Macbeth,
Lady Macbeth is considered nearly sinister in comparison with her husband, Macbeth, a perception that is supported by
such assertions as from the lips of her character. Indeed, Macbeth demonstrates considerably less determination than his
wife. Macbeth's self-doubting statement of "Each corporal agent to this terrible feat/Away, and mock the time with fairest
show/False face must hide what the false heart doth know :"( I.vii.80-82) As he is considering the grave deed, he and
Lady Macbeth have connived to commit, indicating his awareness of the negative consequences, he is likely to suffer,
even if unspecific. As a result, Lady Macbeth scorns him for his mental weakness. In bloodying her hands in the death of
the king, she chastises her husband: My hands are of your color; but I shame/To wear a heart so white (II.ii.63-64).
Typically, weakness is associated with the female, and man gains integrity through strength and boldness in battle. But
Macbeth loses his courage at the decisive moment and Lady Macbeth assumes his bloody obligation. Her husbands
weakness is not only shameful in Lady Macbeths attitudes; his weakness is also as unnatural as her strength. Such a
reversal carries with it significant social ramifications. Tennenhouse comments upon the gender reversal and its political
symbolism:
Most other Jacobean tragedies presuppose this same connection between sexual relations and the condition of the
political body. In staging Macbeth, Shakespeare simply literalizes the homology which makes unruliness on the part of an
aristocratic woman into an assault on the sovereigns power. He allows Lady Macbeth to overrule her husband in order to



ISSN 2239-978X
ISSN 2240-0524

Journal of Educational and Social Research


MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy

Vol. 4 No.4
June 2014

show that such inversion of sexual relations is also an inversion of the political order. Her possession of illicit desire in its
most masculine form- the twisted ambition of the malcontent leads directly to regicide (Das 47-48).
Positioning woman over man has not just domestic but political connotations as well. Lady Macbeths dominion
over Macbeth reflects the larger issue of female involvement in the political structure and a womans possible dominion
as monarch over man as subject. Lady Macbeths strength deteriorates as she falls into periods of lunacy and
sleepwalking. Lady Macbeth postulates that none can call our power to account, (V.i.37) but apparently, she mistakes
the power of her own conscience. Her manic fixation with bloodied hands and her final act of suicide indicate a personal
trial and conviction. A famous critic, Sarah Siddons has expressed pardon of Lady Macbeth's words and behavior by
emphasizing that it is ambition that drives Lady Macbeth. Siddons believes that Lady Macbeth's mention of a nursing
child in the midst of her dreadful language persuades one unequivocally that she has really felt maternal yearning of a
mother towards her babe. Siddons further points out that "it is only in soliloquy that she (Lady Macbeth) invokes the
powers of hell to unsex her." In 1785, Sarah Siddons played Lady Macbeth to her brother John Kembles Macbeth.
Siddons was said to have been the only woman who could ever play this role. She was a strikingly beautiful woman, very
tall and statuesque. The 18th century Shakespeare-scholar, William Hazlitt said of Siddons, We can conceive of nothing
grander. It seemed almost as if a being of superior order had been dropped from higher sphere to awe the world with the
majesty of her appearance. Power was seated in her brow, passion emanated from her breast as from a shrine. She was
tragedy personified. Siddons choice made Lady Macbeth a ruthlessly ambitious woman who dominated her husband.
Her brothers Macbeth was said to have been in a constant state of blindly rushing towards and from his ambitions.
Siddons countered this by being absolutely firm and even masculine in her desires. She became the strongest of the pair.
Hazlitt said, She is a great bad woman, whom we hate, but whom we fear more than we hate. This fear came
from her utter steadiness. Lady Macbeth seems to know that she will need to coax him into performing the murder of
Duncan. She decides what needs to be done and she chastise[s] with the valor of her tongue every fear and doubt
Macbeth has about performing that deed. The choices made by Siddons of masculinity and steadiness seem to be found
in Lady Macbeths famous unsex me speech. She demands the forces of evil to neuter her, to free her of gender, and
the frailty of womanhood. Lady Macbeth, often, in the script, takes charge of the situation. Siddons read this to mean
Lady Macbeth was in charge at all times. She chose to make Lady Macbeth the dominant figure in the relationship. More
evidence for Lady Macbeths dominance may come from her constant questioning of Macbeths manhood. It is the strike
she makes most often to push him into action. Macbeth falls for it every time. Again, it seems as though Siddons chose to
believe that it is a constant part of their relationship.
Hazlitt has compared Lady Macbeth with the three Witches. According to this critic, Lady Macbeths solid
substantial displays of passion, and the uncontrollable eagerness of anticipation when she receives her husbands
account of the predictions of the Witches, show a striking contrast to the cold malignity of the Witches who are equally
instrumental in urging Macbeth to his fate. The Witches urge Macbeth to evil because of their love of mischief and
because of a motiveless delight in deformity and cruelty. They are hags of mischief; they are malicious because of their
incapacity to enjoy any simple pleasure and they are enamored of destruction for its own sake. But Lady Macbeth urges
Macbeth to evil because of the force of her passion. Her fault seems to have been an excess of the strong principle of
self-interest and family advancement which does not recognize the common feeling of compassion and justice. A passing
reflection, on the resemblance of the sleeping Duncan to her father, alone prevents her from murdering Duncan with her
own hand.
According to S.T. Coleridge, Macbeth is described by Lady Macbeth in such a way that in the process she also
reveals her character. Lady Macbeth, like all in Shakespeare, is a class individualized: -- of high rank, felt mush alone,
and feeding herself with day-dream of ambitions; she mistakes the courage of fantasy for the power of bearing the
consequences of the realities of guilt. Hers is the mock fortitude of a mind deluded by ambition; she shames her husband
with a superhuman audacity of fancy which she can not support, but she sinks in the season of remorse, and dies in the
suicidal agony. Her speech: Come all you spirits/That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here..... (Lall 150) is that of
one who had habitually familiarized her imagination to dreadful conceptions, and was trying to do so still more. Her
innovations and requisitions are all the false efforts of a mind accustomed only hitherto to the shadow of the imagination,
vivid enough to through the everyday substances of life into shadow, but never as yet brought in to direct connect with
their own correspondent realities. She gives no evidence of a womanly life, no wifely joy at the return of her husband, no
pleasure terror at the thoughts of his past dangers, while Macbeth bursts forth naturally: My dearest love ...... (p.150)
and shrinks from the boldness with which she presents his own thought to him. With consummate art, she at first uses as
incentives the very circumstances (such as Duncans coming to their house) which Macbeths conscience would most
probably have mentioned to as motives of abhorrence or repulsion, but Macbeth is not yet prepared and says: We will
speak further (Lall 150).



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Journal of Educational and Social Research


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June 2014

The critic, M. Leigh-Noel, in her study of Lady Macbeth, offers further defense by considering Lady Macbeth's
circumstance of socioeconomic position and history, as well as on her own assertion that Lady Macbeth had been a
mother. Noel suggests that, in the age that Macbeth was written "human life was by no means as sacred as it is now; and
that violence was the common resort of both mean and noble in their efforts to gain the desires of their souls." Noel
places emphasis on Lady Macbeth being the "solitary inmate" of Macbeth's castle, believing she was "cheered only by
occasional and fitful visits from her husband." Noel further suggests that Lady Macbeth had to "live only on the
remembrance of the bittersweet joy of maternity, to wake up and miss the magnetic pressure of infant fingers
consequently, causing Lady Macbeth to cling "more tenaciously to her husband" (Thompson & Roberts 174). Noel
believes that these circumstances support the theory that Lady Macbeth paid "a terrible price . . . to gratify her husband's
ambition." That while " Macbeth had the stronger wishes, she (Lady Macbeth) had the stronger will" (Thompson &
Roberts 175) and since it is will that prevails over wishes, Lady Macbeth's share of the burden in her conspiracy with her
husband outweighed that of Macbeth's.
Shakespeare's Representation of Women in his Tragedies Noel's arguments validly challenge many common
perceptions of Lady Macbeth and rightfully points to isolation and suffering as likely contributors to Lady Macbeth's loss of
mental capacity. But it is the shocking threat Lady Macbeth made regarding dashing the brains of her nursing child that
the critic, France Anne Kemble believes is "no mere figure of speech" continues to cast Lady Macbeth as a character who
is much worse that her male counterpart.
Harold Bloom, in The Invention of the Human, brings up idea that informed and even translated directly into the
creation of Lady Macbeth. One common idea he presents is that Macbeth is her second husband. He claims that
Macbeth is dependent on Lady Macbeth. He comes to her first with the Witches promise. He is led by her insistence of
their steps to power. His dependence on her also allows for a greater sense of loss for Lady Macbeth when he starts to
exclude her from plans. If, after the murder, he no longer needs her, the steps to her decline seem clear. She has gone
from his trusted, needed advisor to a wife who is purposefully being left out. Bloom refers to Lady Macbeth as pure will.
The lack of will that Macbeth seems to have succumbed to is what makes Lady Macbeth so necessary to him, particularly
early on. She lets her desire to be queen drive her and her husband to regicide in her home. It seems that Macbeth could
not have gotten to that point by himself. He says that he had been honored and it wasnt yet time to give up those honors,
even though she is suggesting greater honors. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are the happiest couple in all of Shakespeare.
He calls them, persuasive and valuable personalities, profoundly, in love with each other. This statement, particularly,
informed the choices for Lady Macbeth. In this case, the idea that they loved each other seemed more useful than the
idea that she was a mother figure for Macbeth, or that she needed him to achieve her political goals, or that it was a
lust/sex based relationship. She has to scold him at times for being afraid and for getting upset. She does send him to
bed, like a mother, after the disastrous banquet. Her need for Macbeth as her way into power is obvious that she cannot
gain power as a woman without a man. She needs to be married to man who can get her to the top. She got lucky with a
powerful man whom she also deeply loves.
Dr. Samuel Johnson has commented that the argument, by which Lady Macbeth persuades her husband to
commit the murder, affords a proof of Shakespeares knowledge of human nature. She urges the excellence and dignity
of courage, a glittering idea which has dazzled mankind from age to age; but this sophism Macbeth has ever destroyed,
by distinguishing true from false fortitude, in a line and a half; of which it may almost be said that they ought to bestow
immortality on the author even all his other production had been lost:
I dare do all that may come a man;
Who dares do is none. (I.vii.46-47)

This topic, which has been always employed with too much success, is used in this scene, with peculiar propriety
to a soldier by a woman. Courage is the distinguishing virtue of a soldier, and the reproach of cowardice cannot be borne
by any man from a woman without great impatience.
She, then, urges the oaths by which he had bound himself to murder Duncan, another art of sophistry by which
man had deluded their consciences, and persuaded themselves that what would be criminal in others is virtuous in them;
this argument Shakespeare, whose plan obliged him to make Macbeth yield, has not confused, though he might easily
have shown that a former obligation could not be nullified by a latter [...]
The passions are directed to their true end. Lady Macbeth is merely detested; and though the courage of Macbeth
preserves some esteem, yet every reader rejoices at his fall. Thus, Shakespeares drama reflects the Elizabethan world.
Within the play Macbeth, one sees potential conflicts arising from female ambition for sovereign power and corruption of
the politic body through corruption of the female sovereign body. In this play, Shakespeare mirrors anxiety from within the



ISSN 2239-978X
ISSN 2240-0524

Journal of Educational and Social Research


MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy

Vol. 4 No.4
June 2014

Elizabethan culture relating to the existence and dependence upon a female monarch. Also, the play ends with the
diminution of female sovereign authority and an apparent return to a state of normalcy within a more traditional,
patriarchal framework. This return to patriarchy represents both Shakespeares political resolution and the Elizabethan
cultural desire.
Shakespeare realizes that throughout the history of mankind, women have always been at a disadvantageous
position socially, economically and politically. Through strong female characters, Shakespeare has delineated gender
issues. He has given a comprehensive view of life with equal emphasis on both male and female characters. His female
characters show the social stigmas they have undergone during that time. He has portrayed his personal admiration for
intelligent, strong women, using virtues and strength he gives his female characters. So, we can say that Shakespeare
should be considered one of the pioneers of feminist movement. Actually, through representation of women characters in
the tragedies, he wants the elimination of gender discrimination and advocates the true liberation of women in patriarchal
society.
Now, this paper also aims at discussing on the character of Hedda Gabler along with literary criticism:
3. Hedda Gabler
Henrik Ibsens Hedda Gabler is one of the most controversial feminist plays, where the dramatist has unveiled a
difference between patriarchy and matriarchy of the 19th century Scandinavian Bourgeois society. And, Ibsen has
emphasized much more on matriarchal power and domination than patriarchal system and order. According to many, the
female protagonist is viewed as femme fatale character among Ibsen's women. Being based on her character, this paper
highlights the empowerment of Hedda in the play, Hedda Gabler.
In Preface to Hedda Gabler, William Archer claims that the environment and subsidiary personages are all
thoroughly national or Norwegian. Archer thinks that Hedda herself is an international type; a product of civilization by
no means peculiar to Norway (Arches, XII, quoted in Hossain 28). Archer finds Hedda not only international, but
modern also, particular traits and tendencies of the Hedda type are very common in modern life. What Archer writes
further confirms our estimate of a powermonger about Hedda, but this is a unique complicated kind of power:
Hyperesthesia lies at the root of her tragedy. With a keenly critical, relentlessly solvent intelligence, Hedda
combines a morbid shrinking from all the gross and prosaic detail of the sensual life. She has nothing to take her out of
herself not a single intellectual interest or moral enthusiasm ... Her malign egoism rises up uncontrolled, and calls to its
aid her quick and subtle intellect (Gosse XVIII-XIX, quoted in Hossain 28).
From draft material of Hedda Gabler, we can find that there is extensive, including a complete draft version of
the play, a number of revisions of the draft, together with two notebooks of notes and jottings and trail dialogue
(McFarlane 286-87, quoted in Hossain 28). One of the entries in Ibsens two notebooks reads: The demonic thing about
Hedda is that she wants to exert an influence over another person. And, this not only justifies us in our sense of a demon
about Hedda, but also provides a big basis for ones going by the idea of power the drive to exert an influence on
others in explaining the whole Ibsens works. James McFarlane, in his Drama and the Mind: Hedda Gabler in Ibsen
and Meaning Studies, Essays and Prefaces, places ideas enough for ones feeling like doing so. For McFarlane
considers Hedda to be a means serving much more general and characteristically Ibsenist idea. And, also that
consequently the other characters in the play, far from being merely feeds or foils to Hedda, are themselves essential
and integral to a full articulation of the statement; the play is concerned to make. McFarlane calls the play a dramatic
account of certain proceedings: the history of Heddas bid for control of Lovborg, of the savagery of her failure, and of its
consequences (McFarlane 286- 87, Hossain 29). McFarlane comes to inform us how any such conduct as is found in
Hedda had always roused Ibsen to fury: any interference of this order in other peoples lives, any tampering with their
liberties or their efforts at self-realization, particularly if done under the guise of altruism or in the name of righteousness,
at once drew his anger (McFarlane 286-87, quoted in Hossain 29).
Hedda is highlighted in the whole world - literature, one unique scope for probing into demonic aspects of human
character. As is expected from the dialectically solid formation of any such character, Hedda is dominating not towards
any one or single person. And, her husband Tesman is no less a victim, only that in his case one can see how, once the
domination is asserted and assured, there is only contempt for the victim (McFarlane 288). Hedda has been shown
connected by Ibsen with her father, an army General and an obviously powerful person. Ibsens stage-direction reads:
By the back wall of the inner room, a sofa, a table and a couple of chairs can be seen. Above the sofa hangs the portrait
a handsome elderly man in a general uniform. Above the table, a hanging lamp with an opalescent glass shade (Act I,
290). A note to this part of the stage direction reads as follows:
As the only completely personal object on display, the portrait takes on particular importance for a viewer.



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June 2014

Conventionally, such a portrait would represent the present owner of the house or his ancestor, but as the content gets
filled in, it comes to represent both Heddas upbringing and the biological influence on her personality: the twin bases of
Naturalistic characterization as well as explaining her unfeminine desires and acts. Its presence in the inner room also
marks this as specially Heddas space, private, even interior in the sense of being inside her psyche.
The uniform in the portrait is also a visual clue to the values. Hedda has derived from her father: in the 19th century
most generals were aristocrats, who commanded men (Innes 114).
Hedda has been shown by Ibsen connected with her powerful father in a very remarkable way; one gets this in the
very name she has been given by Ibsen. Another note prepared for the title of the play given below:
Properly speaking, the name of the heroine should be Hedda Tesman since at the date of the play; women
automatically took their husbands surname on marriage. Ibsen pointed out to his German translator that the title is
intended to emphasize that she is her fathers daughter.
The title also signals Heddas unconventional nature and her assertion of her own individuality in opposition to
social convention in contrast to Thea, who insists on being called Mrs. Elvested in spite of having left her husband. It is
also possible to deduce from the title that this is a character-study pure and simple ..., which goes along with Ibsens
principle of dramatic composition that the play proceeds from the individual (Innes 114).
The play, Hedda Gabler (1890) offers a rich literary text for decoding the hidden messages, about human
consciousness and constructing the indicated meanings about human existence, especially from the perspective of
feminist theory. Hedda, one of Ibsens controversial female characters, can be explored from a new sort of feminist
perspective, or even beyond the traditional feminist critical convention of man/woman duality. According to Xu Yanhong,
an Ibsen scholar, Hedda is one of the boldest dramatic characters among Ibsens women. She can be viewed both as a
feminist and as an ordinary woman. Hedda Gabler is characterized as a perverse, exasperated and irreconcilable young
lady. All this distinguishes her from ordinary women, and undoubtedly, endows her with a sort of rebellious feminist spirit.
Although Ibsen himself does not intentionally advocate feminist doctrines, his sympathetic portrayal of this character
might betray his original intention. To make the story more dramatic, Ibsen grants Hedda a soul craving for beauty and
freedom which an ordinary young woman usually possesses. From the very beginning, Hedda has both the
characteristics of a rebellious woman and those of an ordinary angel like woman.
Tragedy is created only when such a figure of strong character and free soul is caught between her unconventional
and unrestrained former flame [Lovborg] and her dull and mediocre husband [Tesman]. She is torn between the
suffocating societal reality and her liberating spirit. It is meaningful that the play ends with her suicide by a single shot,
she breaks away forever from the uninviting and boring banquet of life. Her death is indeed obscure to the audience but if
we realize the above two aspects of her character, we understand easily why she has gone to the extreme; even in her
attitude toward death, she distinguishes herself from ordinary women. This tragic figure is approached as a prospective
feminist who is caught between the repressing 19th century Bourgeois society and her own desire and longing for
freedom; she awakens like autumn leaves with the triviality and boredom which feature her immediate surroundings --her
family and social relations, and acquaintances torturing her independent and rebellious mentality. And, she comes to
collapse when her aspiration for emancipation and her expectation for a meaningful and fulfilling life are shattered to
pieces at the end of the play.
In Hedda Gabler, we deal with a more complex, intricate character. The eponymous heroine has been variously
interpreted by critic and actress as a caged tigress a hooded cobra, or a cruel princess. Many (male) critics are ready to
view Hedda as a demonic character, a counter foil to the Doll-like Nora. Rather personal tragedies in the form of
nature, propensity, and personality- interact with the social environment in the form of lack of space, and lack of
possibilities to produce surpassing drama:
Vivid, anguished dangerous Hedda is all of these. But, she is also complicated and natural. She suffers, she
struggles, she is human neither good nor evil a bundle of unresolved tendencies, a human being in process of
development, conditioned by heredity, limited by environment ... striking out blindly in search of fulfillment (Ahmed 126).
Personally, Hedda is face to face with an inner ability to draw sustenance from the destiny sees fit to bestow on
each individual. But socially, one cannot help feeling. Hedda is gazing out of the window to a world where woman has to
conform to a rigid, familial, sexual, emotional, intellectual role, circumscribed by a dependent status on a husband; one
has to pray on. Hedda gazes at the world denied to woman, the world that may be but has not been born. Heddas
transformation into the new-woman never even takes off. A very sobering thought for one who undertakes a feminist
reading of Ibsens play, Hedda Gabler.
Hedda uses her authority over Tesman, Lovborg and Thea Elvested. As Hedda watches all the characters from a
vantage point, she fails to realize that she is not only being watched by Brack, it is also being judged. Hedda, symbol of
physical representation of power, controls all other characters through her visible/invisible presence. Berta, the old maid



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is perturbed because she thinks she fails to satisfy Hedda. David Thomas comments on Hedda Gabler:
Hedda physically manipulates all the stage space given to the play. In Act II, she cleverly directs Brack and
Tesman to use her upstage room for punch and cigars so that she can use the drawing room for her encounter with
Lovborg. In all three Acts, she bullies Thea into sitting or standing in positions where she can dominate her. In Act IV,
however, this changes drastically. As the consequences of her actions become known the destruction of Loborgs
manuscript and his subsequent death she loses her previously dominant status. While the others literally pick up the
shattered pieces of what Hedda has destroyed, she finds herself treated like the irresponsible child; she has become
(Thomas 89-90, quoted in Zaman 82-83).
Thomas also explains how from this point onwards other characters intrude into the circle of dominance created by
Hedda. With the excuse of putting together the notes of Lovborg, Tesman and Thea take their positions in Heddas
private room. Thomas points out that as Hedda takes refuge by the stove Brack stands over her menacingly, quietly
making oblique sexual threats ( Zaman 90). Interestingly, after losing emotional control over other characters, Hedda
loses physical control even over the interior of her house. Death and the mechanisms of power go hand in hand and
Hedda, who desires so much to control the lives of other people, has to kill herself. Though Hedda shows her
nonchalance to the whole affairs at the very beginning, she is the one who burns Lovborgs forthcoming book. This book
is something about which Lovborg is so proud. Hedda burns the book this should be seen in relation to the fact that
Thea has beautiful hair that Hedda threatens to burn. However, it is Tesman who sits after the death of Lovborg with
Hedda to page together the book that has turned into ashes. This threatens Heddas position. She fears to be defeated
by Thea. Heddas choice of committing suicide shows that individuals like her are never accepted by the conventional
and disciplinary society. She has been dominating people around her, though by the power of sexuality. Hedda is
challenged by a male authority figure Brack, who tries to blackmail her to subjection.
From above discussion, we may realize that Ibsens Hedda Gabler, one of the most powerful women in his plays,
who never surrenders herself to male domination and order, through this character we can understand that Ibsen has
emphasized on matriarchy rather than patriarchy. Ibsen's feminist creation-Hedda is one of the most controversial female
characters of his women. Many famous critics have commented on Ibsens Hedda Gabler differently. In this paper, I will
discuss the critical judgments of several critics concerning Hedda Gabler:
In Ibsens New Drama, Sir Edmund Gosse points out that Hedda is one of the most singular beings whom Ibsen
has created. She has a certain superficial likeness to Nora, of whom she is, indeed, a kind of moral parody or perverted
imitation. Hedda Gabler is a spoilt child, whose indulgent father has allowed her to grow up without training of any kind.
Superficially, gracious and pleasing, with a very pretty face and tempting manners, she is devoid of moral sense in reality
wholly. She reveals herself, as the play proceeds, as without respect, for age or grief, without natural instincts, without
interest in life, untruthful, treacherous and implacable in revenge. She is a very ill-conditioned little social panther or
ocelot, totally without conscience of ill or preference for good, a product of the latest combination of pessimism,
indifferentism and morbid selfishness all claws and this for blood under the delicate velvet of her beauty.
Hedda Gabler is a more pronounced type of the perverse erotic or anti-social woman than Ibsen has ever created.
Through depicting Hedda Gabler, Ibsen seems to have expended his skill on the portrait of a typical member of that
growing class, peculiarly frequent now-a-days the simple and masculine doctrines of obedience to duty, of perseverance,
of love to mankind, are in danger of being replaced by a complicated and sophisticated code which has the effect of
making some of us mere cowards in the face of difficulty and sacrifice, and of disgusting all of us with the battle of life. In
the play, Hedda Gabbler, we can see the religious idea violently suppressed under the pretext of a longing for liberty. She
will not be a slave, yet is prepared for freedom by no education in self- command. In stead of religion, morality, and
philosophy, her head is feverishly stuffed with an amalgam of Buddhism and Schopenhauer. Even the beautiful
conventions of manners are broken down, and the suppression of all rules of conduct seems to be the sole road to
happiness. In her breast, with its sickly indifference, love awakens no sympathy; age no respect, suffering no pity, and
patience in adversity no admiration (Innes 55).
In On playing Hedda, Elizabeth Robins comments that Mr. Clement Scott understands Hedda? Any man except
that Wizard Ibsen really understands her? That is the tremendous part of it. How should men understand Hedda on the
stage when they do not understand her in the persons of their wives, their daughters, their women- friends? One lady of
our acquaintance, marries and not noticeably unhappy, says laughing, Hedda is all of us. Hedda is not all of us, but she
is a good many of us. Anyway, she is a bundle of the unused possibilities, educated to fear life; too much opportunity to
develop her weakness, no opportunity at all to use her best powers.
Hedda is first represented to us as an enviable person. We hear of what General Gablers daughter has been
accustomed to; how fond she is of dancing and shooting at a mark and riding with her handsome father in her long
black habit and with feathers in her hat. It is the corrosive action of those qualities on a woman in Heddas circumstances



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that makes her the great acting opportunity. She is in her revolt against those common places surroundings that the
book- worm she has married thought so elegant her unashamed selfishness; her scorn of so- called womanly qualities;
above all, her strong need to put some meaning into her life. Heddas first and dearest dream has been to find contrasts
with life through the attractive young man of letters, Eilert Lovberg that hope ends in driving him from her at the point of a
pistol- not, as an eminent critic has said, in the ostentation of outraged purity which is the instinctive defense of woman
to whom chastity is not natural. Hedda drives Lovbrog from her in disgust; disgust at the new aspects of vulgar
sensuality which her curiosity about life has led him to reveal. They make her gorge rise. She never denies it is her doing
that he reveals these things; it is not her doing that he has them to reveal. The man who has wallowed in that filth must
not touch Hedda Gabler not fresh from the latest orgy: the effect of that experience, plus the conditions of her own life
and upbringing, is to throw her into marriage with the intelligible man she can find who is decent, and no one can deny
that poor Tesman is entirely decent. Hedda speculates like many other women, on the opportunity politics would give to
her husband, and through him, give to her; but she is too intelligent to have much hope of Tesman in that direction. She is
no sooner home from her boring honey-moon than she finds that a girl she has looked down on and terrorized at schoolshrinking, gentle Mrs. Elvested.
Heddas passion for external material beauty is not the only kind of beauty that sways her. Lovborg in his moods of
poetic exaltation has given her a glorious sense of freedom, of daring. She has her phrase for those of his high moods.
When Hedda asks eagerly, Did he have vine leaves in his hair? (Act III, 331) She is not inquiring whether Lovborg is
drunk with the fiery Scandinavian punch, but whether he has tasted a diviner draught. She is using her symbol for his
hour of inspired vision, which has for her, its intoxication. She has lost all that - unless she can break the hold of this
irritating little goose. Thea Elvested says that she has been so frightened of Hedda at school.
It is a commentary on actress psychology that though in those days Elizabeth Robins accepts, and even herself
uses, the description of Hedda as a bloodless egoist. Ibsens unwritten clue brings Robins close enough to the coldblooded egoist to feel her warm to her (Robins) touch; to see Hedda Gabler as pitiable in her hungry loneliness to see
her as tragic. She is insolent and evil. Naturally enough, no critic, so far as Robins knows, has ever noticed the governing
factor in Heddas outlook, her consciousness of one sort of power, anyway the power of escape. The reason, men have
not noticed the bearing on Heddas character, and fate seems plains enough. Certainly, the particular limitations and
enslavements threaten women, who do not threaten men. Such enslavements may seem so unreal to decent men as to
appear as melodrama (Innes 58-61).
In Hedda Gabler: The Play in Performance, Janet Suzman points out that [...] Hedda is a prey woman to hers.
Her strong heart pumps away inside her healthy body. She gets no ... feeling of illness from her. She suffers from an
ancient disease, Accidie (i.e. sloth one of the seven deadly sins, is like medieval medical term for listlessness, and has
become used to signify a state where all the activities seem pointless since life has no purpose.) Suzman believes that
Hedda cannot equate compromise with living, and in that sense is more true to herself than anyone in the play. Both
Tesman and Berta adapt. Thea does anything to adapt. Eilert Lovborg tries and fails. Hedda cannot try and must not fail.
Paralyzed by her own perfectionism, tied down by the lack of alternatives, devoured by the unquestioning greedy
lives around her and inside her, where Hedda is to direct that nervous animal energy of hers. She must be central to
everyones attention and not peripheral. She must know everything and commit herself to nothing. The baby forbids that it
is a very committal to the future. Her final act is a combination of expertise and taste. But, it is an absolute necessity, and
in that sense, it is an act of passion and commitment.
In an interview, Janet Suzman also comments that Hedda must not be played as a cold, passionless, invulnerable
creature that is superior to the situation in which she finds herself. It is true that she is bored with everything around her,
and contemptuous, and this may appear to give her and air of superiority in relation to the other characters, but this
boredom is not a passive emotion, and in its depth and intensity, it results in an intense inner frustration that threatens to
paralyze her. Hedda is very provincial as well as being the proud daughter of her father, General Gabler. She fails to
make her escape into the romantic world. She imagines Eilert Lovborg inhabiting there is no horse, no new piano, no
butler, no entertaining only her guns to afford her some relief from her frustration. And, the greatest threat of all is the
expected baby, which destroys all her dreams of freedom, and reduces her status to that of a provincial housewife,
mother and it is Tesmans.[...]
Hedda feels trapped, and everything aggravates her situation, and when she fails to triumph over it vicariously
through the suicide. She encourages Eilert Lovborg to commit. She has no alternative but to destroy herself. She sets up
the scenario for her own death. Eva le Gallienne mentions in this respect that the curtains she draws, as if they were
stage-curtains, before shooting herself. Hedda is a weak character in the sense that she has not the courage to face her
mundane life of day- to- day existence, yet she has the courage to shoot herself. This shooting is adumbrated (i. e. to
suggest or describe something in an incomplete way) by all unusual, shocking, and unexpected things that she does in



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the play. Her weakness as an ordinary mortal and her struggle as an extra ordinary one give her, her tragic stature, and
make of her an enigmatic, awesome creature. [...]
There is quite a lot of comedy in Hedda Gabler; it is an essential to it as it is, in Shakespeare. [...] Cleopatras illusage of the messenger who brings her news of Antony is a good example. We dislike her for ill-usage of he
messenger___ one should not treat a servant like that but there is also something laughable about her loss of self-control
and the shocked surprise of he messenger which makes us warm to Cleopatra because it reveals her as human and
fallible. The scene with the aunts hat is like that, both when she mistakes it for the servants, and when she tells Brack
later with disarming candor that the mistake was calculated. We dislike her for her spitefulness laugh at the discomfiture
of the fussy aunt, and appreciate Heddas irritability as all too human. [...] She might do so if she were not surrounded by
such very unsympathetic people__ the foolish pedantic husband, the smotheringly affectionate aunt with her unwelcome
and arch allusions to her pregnancy, the predatory insinuating judge, the mouse like Thea. Hedda is no saint. [...] (Innes
100-101).
This paper focuses on the character of Hedda Gabler from different perspective, especially, her power structure
who is the representative of the 19th century Scandinavian Bourgeois family. Through this female protagonist, we can
realize the women question of Ibsens contemporary age. In the play, Hedda Gabler, the female protagonist has been
shown as the paradigm of female power and dominance, rebellious personality, self-sacrifice soul, irresistible, undefeated
modern woman. Ibsen, through the character of Hedda gabler, has tried to regenerate the revolutionary passion of a
woman's potentiality and self-freedom, and female power is mostly prioritized.
4. Comparative and Contrastive Analysis
In Shakespearean political tragedy, Macbeth and Ibsenian domestic tragedy, Hedda Gabler, both Lady Macbeth and
Hedda Gabler are the manifesto of the 20th and 21st century radical feminism. Through these powerful women, we can
comment that they have been upheld as the sharp weapon of the feminism; they never surrender themselves to the
patriarchal rule and domination, not merely that they never hesitate to sacrifice their lives for attaining their self-power,
self-dominancy, and above all, self-identity. Considering the female situation of their respective period, both Shakespeare
and Ibsen were self- conscious critics of society, especially for the unnoticed treatment toward women. Female were
considered to be inferior being; they had no basic rights in the patriarchal order and system. These dramatists have
created the two radical women with a view to awakening the neglected womens community of the Elizabethan England
and the 19th century Scandinavian society respectively. Both Hedda and Lady Macbeth have raised turbulent echoes or
initiated a dreadful revolt against the male dominated norms and order with a view to unveiling universal feminism. In
these two plays, both playwrights have prioritized the female identity, revolt and dominancy more than the male order and
custom. Through repressing the patriarchal domination and tradition, the purpose of our paper is to focus on the feminist
message as articulated in Shakespeares Macbeth and Ibsens Hedda Gabler. In this paper, a plan has been prepared to
expose Shakespeares treatment of woman, Lady Macbeth in his courtly tragedy, Macbeth demonstrating his thoughts
concerning woman and ruling passions in the male dominated society of the Elizabethan Period. Lady Macbeths idea of
masculinity is devastatingly conventional: a man is one who is not afraid. Throughout the play, her femininity is held in
juxtaposition to the unnatural forces to which she appeals. Woman is, normally, the symbol of life and nourishment; but
here Shakespeare emphasizes the unnaturalness of the contraries to whish Lady Macbeth appeals.
Moreover, Hedda naturally falls into the bad woman catalogue. Hedda naturally has both the quality of strong
(feminist) woman and the character of all the ordinary women. Therefore, the characterization of Hedda Gabler is by no
means merely feminist-oriented. By analyzing the darling and demon in a deconstructive way, we may liberate Hedda
from the demonic division, or interpret her beyond a seemingly evil image. Hedda as a woman character obviously has all
the qualities of the new type of women created by Ibsen, but on the other hand, she has inherited some conventions that
all women stick to. James Joyces evaluation of 1900 is the representative of Ibsen's feminism: Ibsens knowledge of
humanity is nowhere more obvious than in his portrayal of women. He amazes one by his painful introspection; he seems
to know them better than they know themselves. Indeed, if one may say so of an eminently virile man, there is a curious
admixture of the woman in his nature (Finney 93). On the other hand, Shakespeare moulded his heroine into
extraordinary women who must have been an inspiration to all women who came to see his plays. Shakespeares
portrayal of female characters is far more positive and more dignified than their portrayal in various sources. Taking into
account the portrayal of the womens characters in the source and the attitude towards women and their image at the
time, it is clear that Shakespeare chose to make his heroines remarkable women.
Both Lady Macbeth and Hedda Gabler want to become unsexed, and they want their milk to turn to gall. They want
to put aside their truly feminine qualities. Both of them are dominant, high ambitious and uncontrollable type of women.



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With the passage of time, Shakespeares Lady Macbeth and Ibsens Hedda Gabler will remain Never-fading in the
History of English Literature. Thus, we sense that in the 21st century, both the two women are the embodiment of radical
feminism.
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