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Kushner's Angels In America

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Kushner's Angels In America
C. Compare and contrast the female leads in Kushner’s Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, Ibsen’s A Doll House, and Williams’ The Glass Menagerie. Be sure to compare and contrast like points and create a strong thesis to unify your points.

The reason I chose the topic to compare and contrast the female leads in Kushner’s Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, Ibsen’s A Doll House, and Williams’ The Glass Menagerie, is because each of the main females in these stories shares a few things in common while also having some things that are not so alike. The females from each story are, Harper Pitt from Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, Nora from A Doll House, and Amanda Wingfield from The Glass Menagerie. A major thing that each of these females have in common is that each struggles with the truth about their lives and reality. Something that would not be similar about the three
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In this play Harper is a stay-at-home wife. Her husband Joe calls her "Buddy" instead of something a husband usually calls his wife such as, "Honey" or "Sweetheart". On page 1550 there is an example of Joe using his term "Buddy", "Buddy? Buddy? Sorry I'm late. I was just...out walking are you mad?" (Kushner). Harper suspects her husband is a homosexual. She calls him out on it a few times. Harper is addicted to Valiums, which causes her to hallucinate and invent imaginary characters to escape her troubles. In Ibsen’s A Doll House published in 1879, Nora is the protagonist. Nora shows small acts of rebellion in parts of the play. These acts of rebellion show she really is not as happy as she seems and she finally gets the strength to leave her marriage to her husband Torvald. As the drama unfolds, and as Nora's awareness of the truth about her life grows, her need for rebellion escalates, culminating in her walking out on her husband and children to find

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