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About A
Doll's House:
Ibsen's A Doll's House (1879), written while Ibsen was in Rome and Amalfi,
was born in a time of revolution in Europe. Charged with the fever of the 1848
revolution, a new modern perspective was beginning to emerge in the literary and
dramatic world, challenging the romantic tradition; it is Ibsen who can be
credited for mastering and popularizing the realist drama derived from this new
perspective. His plays were both read and performed throughout Europe (in
numerous translations) like no other dramatist before. A Doll's House was
published and premiered in Copenhagen.
His success was particularly important for Norway and the Norwegian language.
Freed from four centuries of Danish rule in 1814, Norway was just beginning to
shake off the legacy of Danish domination. A Doll's House was written in a form
of Norwegian that still bore heavy traces of Danish. Ibsen deliberately chose a
colloquial language style to emphasize the theme of realism. Ibsen quickly
became Norway's most popular dramatic figure. But, it is the universality of
Ibsen's writings (and particularly A Doll's House (that have made this play a
classic.
A Doll's House was the second in a series of realist plays by Ibsen. The
first, The Pillars of Society, penned in 1877, caused a stir throughout Europe,
quickly spreading to the avant garde theaters of the island and continent. In
adopting the realist form, Ibsen abandoned his earlier style of saga plays,
historical epics, and verse allegories. Ibsen's letters reveal that much of what
is contained in his realist dramas is based on events from his own life. Indeed,
he was particularly interested in the possibility of true wedlock and in women
in general, later writing a series of psychological studies on women.
One of the most striking and oft-noted characteristics of A Doll's House is
the way in which it challenged the technical tradition of the so-called well
made play in which the first act offered an exposition, the second a situation,
and the third an unraveling. This had been the standard form from the earliest
fables up until A Doll's House. Ibsen's play was notable for exchanging the last
act's unraveling for a discussion. Critics agree that, up until the last moments
of the play, A Doll's House could easily be just another modern drama
broadcasting another comfortable moral lesson. However, when Nora tells Torvald
that they must sit down and "discuss all this that has been happening between
us", the play diverges from the traditional form. With this new technical
feature, A Doll's House became an international sensation and founded a new
school of dramatic art.
Additionally, A Doll's House subverted another dramatic traditions, this one
related to character. Namely, Ibsen's realist drama disregarded the tradition of
the older male moral figure. Dr. Rank, the character who should serve this role,
is far from a moral force; instead, he is sickly--rotting from a disease picked
up from his father's earlier sexual exploits--and lascivious, openly coveting
Nora. The choice to portray both Dr. Rank and the potentially matronly Mrs.
Linde as imperfect, real people was a novel approach at the time.
The real nature of Ibsen's characters were and remain a challenge for actors.
Many actresses find it difficult to portray both a silly, immature Nora in the
first act or so and the serious, open-minded Nora of the end of the last act.
Similarly, actors are challenged to portray the full depth of Torvald's
character. Many are tempted to play him as an slimy, patronizing brute,
disregarding the character's range and genuineness of emotion and conviction.
A more obvious importance of A Doll's House is the feminist message that
rocked the stages of Europe when the play was premiered. Nora's rejection of
marriage and motherhood scandalized contemporary audiences. In fact, the first
German productions of the play in the 1880s had an altered ending at the request
of the producers. Ibsen referred to this version as a "barbaric outrage" to be
used only in emergencies.
In large part, Ibsen was reacting to the uncertain tempo of the time; Europe
was being reshaped with revolutions. The revolutionary spirit and the emergence
of modernism influenced Ibsen's choice to focus on an unlikely hero ‹a housewife
‹in his attack on middle-class values. Quickly becoming the talk of parlors
across Europe, the play succeeded in its attempt to provoke discussion. In fact,
it is the numerous ways that the play can be read (and read it was the printed
version of A Doll's House sold out even before it hit the stage) that make the
play so interesting. Each new generation has had a different way of interpreting
the book, from feminist critique to Hegelian allegory of the spirit's historical
evolution. The text is simply that rich.
From: http://www.classicnote.com
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