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Taken from the highly acclaimed Oxford Ibsen, this collection of Ibsen's plays includes A Doll's House , Ghosts , Hedda Gabler , and The Master Builder . ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more. Review: A must read for lovers of works for the stage - A must read for lovers of works for the stage. Socially aware works and still relevant today Review: Masterpieces, in fine translations; and a note to Oxford - Four of Ibsen's greatest plays, taken from what is, in my opinion the best edition of Ibsen that we have had in our language, the Oxford Ibsen of James McFarlane et al. However, for this paperback reissue, some of the valuable appendices were removed. This is a shame but utterly justifiable. It does create a slight impression of incompetence, however, when, on p. 88, I read 'For an insight [...etc...] see his letters to a Copenhagen newspaper [...] (translated below, pp. 454โ56)' and find that this book only has 355 pages. Regardless, four masterpieces in elegant and idiomatic translations, which make for intense literary pleasure; and the plays can be enjoyed perfectly well without the extra letters, &c. However, Oxford University Press, if you are reading this, it is virtually impossible for a young Ibsen-enthusiast to get hold of the Oxford Ibsen (or any complete Ibsen in English, for that matter) nowadays; so, perhaps the time has come to reissue all of his playsโperhaps more cost-effectively, in paperback (with appendices, preferably).


| Best Sellers Rank | 152,620 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 298 in Drama & Dramatists 620 in English Language Study for Young Adults |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 398 Reviews |
W**R
A must read for lovers of works for the stage
A must read for lovers of works for the stage. Socially aware works and still relevant today
A**.
Masterpieces, in fine translations; and a note to Oxford
Four of Ibsen's greatest plays, taken from what is, in my opinion the best edition of Ibsen that we have had in our language, the Oxford Ibsen of James McFarlane et al. However, for this paperback reissue, some of the valuable appendices were removed. This is a shame but utterly justifiable. It does create a slight impression of incompetence, however, when, on p. 88, I read 'For an insight [...etc...] see his letters to a Copenhagen newspaper [...] (translated below, pp. 454โ56)' and find that this book only has 355 pages. Regardless, four masterpieces in elegant and idiomatic translations, which make for intense literary pleasure; and the plays can be enjoyed perfectly well without the extra letters, &c. However, Oxford University Press, if you are reading this, it is virtually impossible for a young Ibsen-enthusiast to get hold of the Oxford Ibsen (or any complete Ibsen in English, for that matter) nowadays; so, perhaps the time has come to reissue all of his playsโperhaps more cost-effectively, in paperback (with appendices, preferably).
G**R
as described
got used and was still decent quality. did some with pencil annotations, which may be good or bad based on what you're buying this for. was perfect for my a level english class. thanks!
B**Y
First class
Excellent value and service
E**N
Henrik Ibsen - 100 years ahead of his time ...
I love Henrik Ibsen - my old time favourites are : Doll's House and Hedda Gabler. They are so timeless. Henrik Ibsen is one of those rare realist writers who crafted his playwrights carefully with sheer profound clarity and he was 100 years ahead of his time. He is provoking by addressing taboo issues such as psychopathy (Hedda Gabler - female aristoctratic psychopath who uses her superficial charm to advance herself to get anything she desires ) and 'feminist issues' in the Doll's House. He was accused of being 'feminist' - but of course it wasn't true - he was just a great observer of society at around the time when freudian theories were emerging. I was only 18 yrs old when I first read The Doll's House addressing feminist issues such as 'what is it like being trapped in a relationship'. (The Doll's House is a symbol of her entrapment.) So many people analyzed this masterpiece and I will not give away the story line and the plot just highlight a few iconic lines when at times WORDS do speak louder than actions: TORWALD: "You have ruined my happiness. You have ruined my future. Terrible. He can do whatever he wants me now..." NORA: "When I am DEAD - he won't be able to." TORWALD: " Oh, don't be so pathetic. You sound like your father. HOW WOULD IT HELP ME IF YOU WERE DEAD? WHAT DIFFERENCE WOULD THAT MAKE? NONE .." ... and NORA has her light-bulb moment when she comes to terms with her life she lived has been a lie and you hear those iconic words that you almost know by heart: NORA: " ... This wasn't really a house. It was a playroom. I have been your doll ..." ...and it doesn't matter at which European theatre they play this masterpiece -the audience goes quite whilst she delivers her longer monologue and you can feel that sense of tension in the air before she walks through that iconic door leaving her lawyer husband and three children behind. (You could also view the play at the Young Vic Theatre in South London.)
L**P
Ibsen is a genius
Beautifully crafted and endlessly interesting
P**B
The plight of women in the 19th century- and now?- read Ibsen!
How can you become tired of Ibsen? Forget those aweful "new interpretations" by some theatre director with a fraction of Ibsen's talent who thinks that he/she knows better than Ibsen what Ibsen intended to convey! It's not necessary to give the plight of women in the 19th century a new spin for the benefit of an audience which supposedly has a short attention span, presumably because the dierctor thinks they have been conditioned by a diet of plays that choose to tell their story on TV or film through a succession of 10 second close-ups, and unfinished sentences . Any audience can work out the parallels with today!
J**L
Good but out of print
A great collection of Ibsen's plays - a must read for anyone interested in influential drama or literature. There is, however, a newer edition available here: Four Major Plays: (Doll's House; Ghosts; Hedda Gabler; and The Master Builder) (Oxford World's Classics) . The plays chosen are an excellent demonstration of why Ibsen is seen as a major part of the Realist movement; 'Hedda Gabler' raises questions of sexuality and 'A Doll's House' challenges the role of women in society. All four plays were groundbreaking and hugely controversial in their day and are well worth reading. This edition comes complete with a useful introduction outlining Ibsen's life and key contextual factors relevant to each play, as well as some critical comments.
H**E
behind the scenes
After the forced closing of the London theaters by the Puritans in 1642, serious drama in Europe entered a long decline. Despite occasional bright spots--French Neoclassicism, the German Enlightenment--it wasn't until the Victorian Era that a new style of realistic drama emerged, ironically, in Scandinavia and Russia, far from the traditional centers of European high culture. Beginning in 1850 Henrik Ibsen wrote a series of iconoclastic plays that challenged society's taboos and exposed its hypocrisy, while creating larger-than-life characters faced with agonizing ethical dilemmas. Like Shakespeare, Ibsen perhaps is better appreciated on the page than on the stage. With Ibsen, subtext is everything. Taken at face value, his plots can seem absurdly melodramatic, his characters unconvincing, his dialogue trite. You have to learn to read between the lines. Actors often flounder amid Ibsen's characters' nuances, while directors are more interested in making a statement than interpreting the author faithfully. "Hedda Gabler," the longest and most complicated play in this edition, in particular requires repeated readings. Its truly frightful heroine is a latter-day Medea or Lady Macbeth, who resorts to suicide when her nefarious schemes come to naught. "A Doll's House" and "Ghosts" both expose family secrets and hidden passions, while "The Master Builder" is a semiautobiographical tale of an aging artist whose fear of being supplanted by the younger generation leads to a disastrous flirtation with a young admirer who resembles nothing so much as an older Pippi Longstocking. Ibsen's dialogue is akin to the sticomathia of Greek tragedy, bristling with truly Sophoclean irony. If his plots lack Shakespeare's blood and thunder, his characters' inner turmoil is just as real. Sometimes they make the right decision, more often the wrong one, but with Ibsen it all boils down to personal accountability and taking responsibility for ones actions--or inactions. He demands high standards from both his characters and audience. The Oxford Ibsen translation by James McFarlane and Jens Arup is clear and readable. In "Hedda Gabler" they change the obtuse husband's catchphrase, usually translated as "Fancy that!" to "Just think of it!" This edition makes Ibsen as powerful and immediate as he was to his contemporaries.
A**Z
Muy digna edicion
Muy recomendable
W**S
Buy this to restore moulded fibreglass chairs
Perfect for restoring midcentury modern (MCM) moulded fibreglass chairs. Covered all the scratches and gave it a nice sheen and a protective coating that should keep them in shape for another 50 years!
A**A
Loving it๐
Very nice book.Just awesome.More than the expectation.Just loving it.Must buy it.
R**I
Four major plays
These four plays are masterpieces. Donโt waste your time thinking. Just buy it immediately.
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