ABSTRACT

Ibsen’s plays rank among those most frequently performed world-wide, rivaled only by Brecht, Chekhov, Shakespeare, and the Greek tragedies. By the time Ibsen died in 1906, his plays had already conquered the theaters of the Western world. Inviting rapturous praise as well as fierce controversy, they were performed in Europe, North America, and Australia, contributing greatly to the theater, culture, and social life of these continents. Soon after Ibsen’s death, his plays entered the stages of East Asia - Japan, China, Korea - as well as Africa and Latin America. . But while there exist countless studies on Ibsen the dramatist and the significance of his plays within different cultures written mainly by literary scholars, none of them examine the ways in which Ibsen's plays were performed, or the impact of such performances on the theater, social life, and politics of these cultures. In Global Ibsen, contributors look at the way performances of Ibsen's plays address problems typical to modern societies all over the world, including: the inferior social status of women, the decay of bourgeois family life and values, religious fundamentalism, industrial pollution and corporate cover-up, and/or the loss of and search for identity.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

ByERIKA FISCHER-LICHTE

part |2 pages

Part I: What Happened to the Women’s Liberation Movement?: A Doll’s House and Hedda Gabler on Stage

chapter 1|20 pages

Ibsen on the Platteland: The First Professional Production of A Doll’s House in Afrikaans Goes on Tour (1929)

ByTEMPLE HAUPTFLEISCH AND HILDA VAN LILL (SOUTH AFRIKA)

chapter 2|14 pages

Ibsen’s A Doll’s House in America

ByMARVIN CARLSON (USA)

chapter 3|12 pages

A Doll’s House in the Antipodes

ByJACQUELINE MARTIN (AUSTRALIA)

chapter 4|10 pages

Canajun-eh? Finding a House for Nora in Canada

ByERROL DURBACH (CANADA)

chapter 5|14 pages

Women’s Issues and a New Art of Acting: A Doll’s House in Japan

ByMITSUYA MORI (JAPAN)

chapter 6|13 pages

Against Love: Nora and Hedda on the Contemporary Scandinavian Stage

ByTIINA ROSENBERG (SWEDEN)

chapter 7|13 pages

Deborah Warner Directs Hedda Gabler: Mercurial Pistols

ByMARIA SHEVTSOVA (GREAT BRITAIN)

part |2 pages

Part II: Performing Peer Gynt Negotiating Cultural Identity

chapter 8|14 pages

Peer Gynt by the Pyramids in Giza

ByNEHAD SELAIHA (EGYPT)

chapter 9|17 pages

Peer Gynt in Israel: A National Hero Returning from Exile?

ByFREDDIE ROKEM (ISRAEL)

chapter 10|18 pages

Antunes Filho’s Peer Gynt: A Remarkable Production of Ibsen in Brazil

ByTEREZA MENEZES (BRAZIL)

chapter 11|10 pages

Patrice Chéreau’s Peer Gynt: A Renewed Reception of Ibsen’s Theater in France

ByCATHERINE NAUGRETTE (FRANCE)

chapter 12|13 pages

Werner Egk’s Peer Gynt in Berlin 1938: Opera and Politics

ByCLEMENS RISI (GERMANY)

part |2 pages

Part III: Modernization of Society and the Emergence of a New Theater