Friday, October 25, 2019
Henrik Ibsen :: essays papers
Henrik Ibsen    Henrik Ibsen was born at Skien in Norway on March 20, 1828. When he was  eight, his father went bankrupt. This event made a deep impression upon  him. After they went bankrupt, his family moved to a small farm north  of the town where they lived in poverty. Henrik was forced to attend a  small local school. He received a substandard education. In 1843, the  family returned to town. Unfortunately they were still poor. Ibsen came  from a very dysfunctional family.  His domineering father was an  alcoholic who found solace in alcohol. His quiet mother found comfort  in religion. He used them as a model for his plays. The blend of an  overbearing husband and a submissive wife made appearances  in his  plays Brand, A Doll's House, and Ghosts. The bitter character of  Hjalmar Ekdal in The Wild Duck was based on Ibsen's father.  When he  was sixteen, he moved to Grimstad to work for a druggist.  He had  wanted to become a doctor, but game up on the idea after he failed  Greek and Math on his!  University entrance exams. Medicine was not his  only ambition. He also wanted to be a painter.    In 1850, Ibsen entered the first of his three writing periods. His  romantic period went from 1850 to 1873. The greatest works from this  period are the Brandand Peer Gynt Most of the plays that he wrote  during these years are romantic historical dramas. Lady Inger of  Ostraat was a romantic drama with intrigue. The Vikings of Helgeland  was a simple and sad tragedy. The last play of the Romantic period was  Emperor and    Galilean. It is similar to Ibsen's other play Catiline because it  showed his impatience with traditional attitudes and values. In both  plays he showed sympathy for historical characters who were famous for  being rebellious.    Ibsen became the stage manager and playwright of the National Stage in  Bergen in 1851. He worked there for six years. In 1857, he moved to  Christiania (Oslo), where he became director of the Norwegian Theatre.    He neglected both writing and the theatre. He plunged into social life  with his literary friends and drank heavily. In 1858, Ibsen married  Suzannah Thoresen, with whom he had one child, Sigurd Ibsen. This was a  marriage that was often as misunderstood as the  marriages of Ibsen's  dramas. At the age of thirty, Ibsen saw his first performances of  Shakespeare in Copenhagen and Dresden. Shakespeare's work convinced  Ibsen that serious drama must strive toward a psychological truth and  form its basis on the characters and conflicts of mankind. Ibsen and    					    
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