Ibsen: A Doll's House
This 1995 critical study of Ibsen's A Doll's House addresses fundamental questions of text, reception and performance. What is the definitive 'version' of A Doll's House: original text, translation, stage presentation, radio version, adaptation to film or television? What occurs when a drama intended for recipients in one language is translated into another, or when a play written for the stage is adapted for radio, television or film? And to what extent do differences between the media and between directorial approaches influence the meaning of the play text? Discussions of these issues include an internal analysis of the dramatic text and comparative performance analysis, framed by the biographical background to the play and its impact on dramas by Strindberg, Shaw and O'Neill and on films by Ingmar Bergman. The book concludes with a list of productions and a select bibliography.
- A study of one of the central plays in world drama - a standard feature of modern drama courses
- Original analysis based on different manifestations of the text as drama, radio, television and film
- Based on a new model for comparative performance analysis
Product details
April 1995Paperback
9780521478663
228 pages
216 × 140 × 13 mm
0.3kg
12 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Prologue: background
- 2. The drama text
- 3. Translating Et Dukkehjem
- 4. A Doll's House as stage play
- 5. A Doll's House as radio drama
- 6. A Doll's House as teleplay
- 7. A Doll's House as film
- 8. Transposing the end of A Doll's House
- 9. Epilogue: impact
- Sequence scheme of Et Dukkehjem/ A Doll's House
- Select list of productions
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index.