A Doll's House
by Thornton Wilder, Henrik Ibsen, Kenneth McLeish

A Doll's House Book Cover
A Doll's House Cover

Highlights

Synopsis

One of the best-known, most frequently performed of modern plays, A Doll's House richly displays the genius with which Henrik Ibsen pioneered modern, realistic prose drama.

In the central character of Nora, Ibsen epitomized the human struggle against the humiliating constraints of social conformity.

Nora's ultimate rejection of a smothering marriage and life in "a doll's house" shocked theatergoers of the late 1800s and opened new horizons for playwrights and their audiences.

But daring social themes are only one aspect of Ibsen's power as a dramatist.

A Doll's House shows as well his gifts for creating realistic dialogue, a suspenseful flow of events and, above all, psychologically penetrating characterizations that make the struggles of his dramatic personages utterly convincing.

Here is a deeply absorbing play as readable as it is eminently playable, reprinted from an authoritative translation.

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A Doll's House, Belhaven University, Pt 1

Publication

Publisher Dover Publications
Year 1992
Binding Paperback
Pages 72
Place New York
Language English
ISBN-13 9780486270623
ISBN-10 0486270629
eISBN-13 9780486110202
LCCN 91037873
LCC PT8861 .A31 1992
DCC 839.8/226

A Doll's House is a Scandinavian play written by Thornton Wilder and published by Dover Publications in New York (1992).

Digital editions available on Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, Google Play (eISBN 9780486110202).

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