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Ibsen’s Theatre of Ritualistic Visions

An Interdisciplinary Study of Ten Plays

Trausti Olafsson Trausti Olafsson Kenneth Richards

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English
Verlag Peter Lang
27 February 2008
This book examines the ritualistic and mythological features derived from various religious traditions depicted in ten Ibsen plays. The worshipping of the Great Mother, the Mysteries of Eleusis, the Hebrew Passover Meal and Yom Kippur, alongside with the most sacred feasts of Christianity, are identi?ed in Ibsen's texts in a way not discovered before. The outcome is a fascinating voyage through a landscape of ritualistic visions. Throughout the book the author illustrates how the plays contribute to the revival of the sacred in modernist theatre. Each chapter of the book contains a synopsis of the play interpreted, followed by a detailed analysis, which focuses on religious concepts and mythological elements incorporated in Ibsen's texts.
By:   ,
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Verlag Peter Lang
Country of Publication:   Switzerland
Edition:   New edition
Volume:   12
Dimensions:   Height: 220mm,  Width: 150mm, 
Weight:   450g
ISBN:   9783039111343
ISBN 10:   3039111345
Series:   Stage and Screen Studies
Pages:   318
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

The Author: Trausti Olafsson was born in southern Iceland and educated in Prague, Reykjavik, Oslo, and in Norwich, England. At the University of East Anglia he wrote his thesis on Ibsen, on which this book is based. He has worked as a theatre director, and was the Artistic Director for Akureyri Theatre Company in Iceland for three years. Trausti currently teaches dramatic literature and theatre theory at the University of Iceland, Reykjavik, and is a Psychodrama Psychotherapist in private practice.

Reviews for Ibsen’s Theatre of Ritualistic Visions: An Interdisciplinary Study of Ten Plays

I do not want to remember my country as being on the side of evil : the distinguished gentleman from West Virginia-whose service and tenure in the Senate are legendary-pulls tight his toga and renders withering scorn unto Caesar. September 11 was not just about terrorist attacks on a sorely unprepared US, urges Senator Byrd. It was also a day which would turn the life of our nation upside down and transform a lackluster, inarticulate, visionless President into a national and international leader, nearly unquestioned by the media or by members of either party. As the ashes settled on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, this seemingly inept president, the soi-disant uniter, had forced legislation through that effectively gave him extra-constitutional powers: a line-item veto that hid billions of dollars from Congressional oversight; a shadow government that has been described as an 'indefinite precaution,' which can mean anything ; overstuffed discretionary funds for the likes of Rumsfeld and Cheney; spending streams directed to Bush buddies and the Halliburtons of the world. Couple this newfound financial independence of the executive branch with the administration's combative, thoroughly politicized stance-and no administration, writes Byrd, has been so driven by ideology-and you have the recipe for imperium. Thoroughly schooled in the classics, Byrd needs no rhetorical stretches to make that analogy, but his condemnation of Dubya as a kind of bush-league Tiberius rises to Ciceronian heights all the same: Bush's power has been wielded with arrogance, calculation, and disdain for dissenting views. . . . There is virtually no attempt to build consensus by the hard work of reaching across the aisle to find common ground. The self-proclaimed uniter is in fact a divider, and a corrupt one at that. Many early symptoms that heralded the Roman decline may be seen in our own nation today, writes Byrd. Few students and practitioners of politics are better equipped to make such assessments. An outstanding broadside from a true patriot. (Kirkus Reviews)


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