Ghosts (play)

Ghosts
The first edition of Ghosts by Henric Ibsen, 1881
Written byHenrik Ibsen
Characters
  • Mrs. Helen Alving
  • Oswald Alving
  • Pastor Manders
  • Jacob Engstrand
  • Regina Engstrand
Date premiered20 May 1882 (1882-05-20)
Place premieredAurora Turner Hall in Chicago, Illinois
Original languageDanish
SubjectMorality
GenreNaturalistic / realistic problem play
SettingThe country home of the Alving family beside one of the large fjords in Western Norway
A performance of Ghosts in Berlin, 1983, with Inge Keller, Ulrich Mühe, and Simone von Zglinicki

Ghosts (Danish: Gengangere) is a play by the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. It was written in Danish and published in 1881,[1] and first staged in 1882 in Chicago, Illinois, US, performed in Danish.[2]

Like many of Ibsen's plays, Ghosts is a scathing commentary on 19th-century morality. Because of its subject matter, which includes religion, venereal disease, incest, and euthanasia,[3] it immediately generated strong controversy and negative criticism.

Since then, the play has come to be considered a "great play"[4] that historically holds a position of "immense importance".[5] Theater critic Maurice Valency wrote in 1963, "From the standpoint of modern tragedy Ghosts strikes off in a new direction.... Regular tragedy dealt mainly with the unhappy consequences of breaking the moral code. Ghosts, on the contrary, deals with the consequences of not breaking it."[6]

Ibsen disliked the English translator William Archer's use of the word "Ghosts" as the play's title, as the Danish or Norwegian Gengangere would be more accurately translated as "The Revenants",[7] which literally means "The Ones Who Return".

  1. ^ "Ghosts | Norwegian play, social criticism, realism | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  2. ^ Hanssen, Jens-Morten (10 July 2005). "Facts about Ghosts". All about Henrik Ibsen. National Library of Norway. Archived from the original on 27 January 2016.
  3. ^ Ibsen, Henrik, Ghosts. Four Major Plays. Oxford World's Classic. Oxford University Press. (1981) ISBN 0-19-283387-1
  4. ^ Ibsen, Henrik. Four Great Plays. Bantam Books (1984) ISBN 9780553212808[page needed]
  5. ^ Ibsen, Henrik. Ibsen. Plays: 1: Ghosts; The Wild Duck; The Master Builder. Dramatists Play Service (1980) ISBN 9780413463302. p. 24
  6. ^ Valency, Maurice. The Flower and the Castle: An Introduction to Modern Drama. Macmillan, 1963. pp. 160–162.
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference auto was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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