Preview

Henrik Ibsen

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
464 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Henrik Ibsen
Junior J. Villarreal 2/3/13
Henrik Ibsen
Henrik Johan Ibsen (Norwegian 20 March 1828 – 23 May 1906) was a major 19th-century Norwegian playwright, theatre director, and poet. He is often referred to as "the father of realism" and is one of the founders of Modernism in the theatre. His major works include Brand, Peer Gynt, An Enemy of the People, Emperor and Galilean, A Doll's House, Hedda Gabler, Ghosts, The Wild Duck, Rosmersholm, and The Master Builder. He is the most frequently performed dramatist in the world after Shakespeare, and indeed, A Doll's House is the world's most performed play.
Several of his plays were considered scandalous to many of his era, when European theatre was required to model strict morals of family life and propriety. Ibsen's work examined the realities that lay behind many façades, revealing much that was disquieting to many contemporaries. It utilized a critical eye and free inquiry into the conditions of life and issues of morality. The poetic and cinematic play Peer Gynt, however, has strong surreal elements.
Ibsen is often ranked as one of the truly great playwrights in the European tradition. Richard Hornby describes him as "a profound poetic dramatist the best since Shakespeare". He is widely regarded as the most important playwright since Shakespeare. He influenced other playwrights and novelists such as George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde, Arthur Miller, James Joyce, and Eugene O'Neill.
Henrik Ibsen was also a major poet, and he published a collection of poems in 1871. However, drama was the focus of his real lyrical spirit. For a period of many hard years, he faced bitter opposition. But he finally triumphed over the conservatism and aesthetic prejudices of the contemporary critics and audiences. More than anyone, he gave theatrical art a new vitality by bringing into European bourgeois drama an ethical gravity, a psychological depth, and a social significance which the theater had lacked since the days of

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    7. Henrik Ibsen- Norwegian playwright, carried realism into the theater. Did not view women as the "angel of the house."…

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Iago vs Krogstad

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Cited: Ibsen, Henrik. “A Doll’s House”. Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing. Eds. X.J. Kennedy and Dana Gioia, 12th Ed. New Jersey: Pearson, 2013. 1598-1650. Print.…

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movement of the doll was a influenced by a play about a woman who became self-motivated woman being in a woman-denying man's world. Henrik Ibsen was born on March 20 of 1828 in a city known as Skien in Norway. His was a Norwegian playwright best known to “ A Doll’s House” among his many works. Ibsen was frequently known as the most influential playwright of the early twentieth century and his work was controversial and inspiring. He is also referred to as " the father of realism and is the founders of modernism on theatre. Several of his dramas were considered controversial and scandalous to his many in his time. The European theater expected to model strict morals of family and propriety but he did the opposite. Henrik Ibsen is widely…

    • 940 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this play Ibsen’s writing is very rebellious for the 1800’s, by showing Nora…

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Erik Erikson

    • 1432 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Erik Erikson is possibly the best known of Sigmund Freud’s many followers. He grew up in Europe and spent his young adult life under the direction of Freud. In 1933 when Hitler was in power of Germany, Erikson immigrated to the U.S. and began teaching at Harvard University. His clinical work and studies were based on children, college students, and victims of combat fatigue during WWII, civil rights workers, and American Indians. It was these studies that led Erikson to believe that Freud misjudged some important aspects of human development.…

    • 1432 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    This background is portrayed in Ibsen’s play in several ways. For example, Nora has to betray her husband’s trust because…

    • 939 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Romeo and Juliet

    • 1444 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Shakespeare is considered to be the greatest English writer and was one of the key people in the avant-garde of contemporary drama in his time. Little is known about Shakespeare’s personal life, but one thing the world does know is that he is one of poetry’s and theatre’s brightest minds, and the man behind the both critically-acclaimed and critically-criticised play, Romeo and Juliet.…

    • 1444 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hedda Gabler by Ibsen

    • 977 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Ibsen, Henrik. Four Major Plays: A Doll’s House, Ghosts, Hedda Gabler, The Master Builder. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.…

    • 977 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Erik Erikson

    • 7548 Words
    • 31 Pages

    I came to psychology from art, which may explain, if not justify, the fact that at times the reader will find me painting contexts and backgrounds where he would rather have me point to facts and concepts. I have had to make a virtue out of a constitutional necessity by basing what I have to say on representative description rather than on theoretical argument. –Erik Erikson1 I have nothing to offer except a way of looking at things. –Erik Erikson2…

    • 7548 Words
    • 31 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Doll's House Controversy

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages

    As time passed, critics continued to recognize how this play’s theme transcends its 19th century context to relate to the lives of people today. A Doll's House shows his gifts for creating realistic dialogue, a suspenseful flow of events and, above all, psychologically penetrating characterizations that make the struggles of his dramatic personages utterly convincing. Overall, Ibsen’s work created a social backlash with those opposed to the feminist movement. While women’s groups eagerly stacked up praises and honors for Ibsen, he fervently tried to disassociate himself from the feminist movement and satiate the critics with “humanist” rather than “feminist” intentions. His creation of an alternate ending to save himself from vituperative critics proves the extent of social upheaval created by his play in the context of the women’s rights movement in Europe and…

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Erik Erikson

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages

    * The first stage of Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development occurs between birth and one year of age and is the most fundamental stage in life.…

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Strindberg's Ibsen

    • 3039 Words
    • 13 Pages

    Barbara Lide Michigan Technological University STRINDBERG’S IBSEN: ADMIRED, EMULATED, SCORNED, AND PARODIED In 1893, when August Strindberg was living in Berlin, he posed for a portrait painted by the Norwegian artist Christian Krogh. Krogh reportedly painted seven portraits of Strindberg at this time, one of which was purchased by Henrik Ibsen. As is well known, Ibsen hung that portrait of Strindberg on the wall of his study, and he has been quoted as saying that he could not write a line without having that “madman staring down at him with his crazy eyes.” Ibsen’s words could, of course, be taken as a lefthanded compliment, for on the one hand, while Strindberg might have provided inspiration – by perhaps furthering the spirit of competition in Ibsen – on the other hand, Strindberg represented “madness.” Also, Ibsen is reported to have said, “He is my mortal enemy, and shall hang there and watch while I write.” (Meyer, p. 266) Yet the actor and director August Lindberg tells about how he once was asked by Ibsen, who never had met Strindberg, if the portrait was a good likeness of Strindberg, and then, “in a whisper,” which, according to Lindberg, Ibsen “perhaps did not intend to be heard, muttered, ‘A remarkable man!’”(M. Meyer, III, p. 253; Lindberg, p. 308). While Strindberg had no portraits of Ibsen hanging in his study, he certainly had formed for himself an image of Ibsen – an image that underwent changes from the time he first read, and was enthralled by, Brand, (with its ruthless idealism), through the “Doll House Years,” when he condemned Ibsen for becoming a “bluestocking” and referred to him in his letters as “Fru Ibsen,” –and again through the years of stiff competition on the stages of Europe, when Strindberg, younger than Ibsen by 21 years, was trying to supercede him as the greatest writer of Scandinavian drama. One of the ironies about this competition is that frequently literary and theatre people outside Scandinavia – especially in Paris – often…

    • 3039 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The well made play is a play constructed according to strict technical principles that produce neatness of plot and the theatrical effectiveness. The form was developed by Eugene scribe and became dominate on 19th century. It called for complex, artificial plotting a build up for suspense, a climactic scene, in which all problems are resolved, and a happy ending. Eugene scribe’s idea of a well made play was designed to present audiences with plots which are interesting and suspenseful and characters which are easy to understand. However when the well made play criteria is strictly observed, plays lose some of their appeal due to the structural repetitions. Henrik combines some of scribes “well made play” techniques with his own ideas (which became the foundations of realism) to provide audiences with a play which attempts to portrays humans truthfully. A doll’s house broke out from the well made play formula through combining the well made play structure with Ibsen’s own technique (problem play)…

    • 734 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1891, Shaw writes The Quintessence of Ibsenism after seeing Ibsen’s A Doll House two years before. It is a criticism that tells us about Shaw more than Ibsen. In his book he talks about many aspects: the realist and idealist, that idealist wears mask and avoid the truth and reality whereas the realist faces it, and the human behaviors should justify itself by its effect on life; no one is villain and no one is hero because in reality, as Shaw sees, there is no complete man to be hero. From this, it arrived to us his theory that there is no villain or hero because it is a matter of affection of life on an individual. We see in Widowers’ Houses, a character rents a slum houses to poor people, he makes use of them, and here we see the real characters as human being away from the romantic conventions. Also, in The Philanderer, it tackles social problems through witty comedy.…

    • 567 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Problem Play

    • 303 Words
    • 2 Pages

    problem play, type of drama that developed in the 19th century to deal with controversial social issues in a realistic manner, to expose social ills, and to stimulate thought and discussion on the part of the audience. The genre had its beginnings in the work of the French dramatists Alexandre Dumas fils and Émile Augier, who adapted the then-popular formula of Eugène Scribe’s “well-made play” to serious subjects, creating somewhat simplistic, didactic thesis plays on subjects such as prostitution, business ethics, illegitimacy, and female emancipation. The problem play reached its maturity in the works of the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen, whose works had artistic merit as well as topical relevance. His first experiment in the genre was Love’s Comedy (published 1862), a critical study of contemporary marriage. He went on to expose the hypocrisy, greed, and hidden corruption of his society in a number of masterly plays: A Doll’s House portrays a woman’s escape from her childish, subservient role as a bourgeois wife; Ghosts attacks the convention that even loveless and unhappy marriages are sacred; The Wild Duck shows the consequences of an egotistical idealism; An Enemy of the People reveals the expedient morality of respectable provincial townspeople.…

    • 303 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics