To the Third Empire: Ibsen's Early Drama

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U of Minnesota Press, 1980 M05 22 - 352 pages

To the Third Empire was first published in 1980. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

Critical acclaim greeted Brian Johnston's 1975 book on Ibsen's final phase, The Ibsen Cycle. Choice called it "the single most provocative and critically exciting books of Ibsen criticism in decades." Johnston now turns his attention to the early works, using the same thematic premise - that the plays follow a clear progression, influenced by the Hegalian aesthetic that pervaded Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. The result is an explanation of the early career that demonstrates both its unity and its essential relation to the realistic cycle that followed. In advancing his argument Johnston provides close readings of ten plays, ranging from Cataline to Emperor and Galilean and including Brand and Peer Gynt. Scholars and students of drama, comparative literature, and Ibsen studies will find To the Third Empire an essential work.

 

Contents

The Subjectivity of Catilinethe
28
The Recovery of the Past
58
Loves Comedy and The Pretenders
102
The Tragedy of Vocation
130
The Parable of Peer Gynt
164
The Mediocre Angels of The League of Youth
208
Emperor and Galilean
224
Toward the Realistic Cycle
272
Notes
285
Selected Bibliography
307
Index
319
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About the author (1980)

Brian Johnston is Professor Emeritus of Dramatic Arts at Carnegie Mellon University.

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