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      Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants
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      Book

      Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants

      DOI link for Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants

      Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants book

      Reproduction and the Future in Ibsen’s Late Plays

      Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants

      DOI link for Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants

      Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants book

      Reproduction and the Future in Ibsen’s Late Plays
      ByOlivia Noble Gunn
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2020
      eBook Published 3 February 2020
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780367330484
      Pages 206
      eBook ISBN 9780367330484
      Subjects Language & Literature
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      Gunn, O.N. (2020). Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants: Reproduction and the Future in Ibsen’s Late Plays (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780367330484

      ABSTRACT

      Who is the proper occupant of the nursery? The obvious answer is the child, and not an archive, a seductive troll-princess, or poor fosterlings. Nevertheless, characters in Hedda Gabler, The Master Builder, and Little Eyolf intend to host these improper occupants in their children’s rooms. Dr. Gunn calls these dramas ‘the empty nursery plays’ because they all describe rooms intended for offspring, as well as characters’ plans for refilling that space. One might expect nurseries to provide an ideal setting for a realist playwright to dramatize contemporary problems. Rather than mattering to Ibsen in terms of naturalist detail or explicit social critique, however, they are reserved for the maintenance of characters’ fears and expectations concerning the future. Empty Nurseries, Queer Occupants intervenes in scholarly debates in child studies by arguing that the empty bourgeois nursery is a better symbol for innocence than the child. Here, ‘emptiness’ refers to the common construction of the child as blank and latent. In Ibsen, the child is also doomed or deceased, and thus essentially absent, but nurseries persist as spaces of memorialization and potential alike. Nurseries also gesture toward the domains of childhood and women’s labor, from birth to domestic service. ‘Bourgeois nursery’ points to the classed construction of innocence and to the more materialist aspects of this book, which inform our understanding of domesticity and family in the West and uncover a set of reproductive connotations broader than ‘the innocent child’ can convey.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |10 pages

      Prologue

      A Nursery at the Museum

      chapter |28 pages

      Introduction

      Ibsen’s Empty Nurseries

      chapter 1|34 pages

      Endless Aunts, Endless Books

      The Future According to Hedda Gabler

      chapter 2|36 pages

      Age Is Just a Number

      Strange Calculations in The Master Builder

      chapter 3|34 pages

      A Dead Child Cannot Look Back

      Lost Boys in Little Eyolf1

      chapter 4|33 pages

      Unfaithful Authenticity

      Going Backstage in the Bourgeois Home

      chapter |5 pages

      Epilogue

      Survivors
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