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"Hedda Gabler": Gender, Role and the World

Part of the Twayne's masterwork studies series
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Lyons sets Henrik Ibsen's avant-garde play, "Hedda Gabler", written in 1890, in its historical context to demonstrate how it made a major contribution to dramatic realism, addressed the emerging issue of women's oppression under Judaeo-Christian moral codes, and confronted 19th-century assumptions about how personal identity and destiny are shaped.

Lyons explains why Hedda's suicide was effectively portrayed by only the most progressive actresses and why it remains a compelling call for the redefinition of gender roles.

Other topics include Ibsen's frank treatment of male and female sexuality and the plays relationship to other literature of the age.

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Product Details
Twayne Publishers Inc.,U.S.
0805794174 / 9780805794175
Hardback
01/12/1990
United States
176 pages
145 x 225 mm, 354 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More