Henrik Johan Ibsen Henrik Johan Ibsen (1828-1906) was a Norwegian playwright, poet, theater director, and one of the most influential dramatists in world literature. Born in Skien, Norway, Ibsen grew up in a family that experienced financial decline, an experience thatsharpened his awareness of social position, respectability, secrecy, and the pressures of public judgment. He worked in pharmacies and theaters before becoming a major literary figure, spending much of his adult life outside Norway in Italy and Germany while writing plays that transformed European drama.Ibsen's early works drew on history, legend, and verse drama, but he became internationally famous for realistic plays that exposed the moral contradictions of modern social life. His major works include Brand, Peer Gynt, Pillars of Society, A Doll's House, Ghosts, An Enemy of the People, The Wild Duck, Rosmersholm, Hedda Gabler, and The Master Builder. He challenged audiences by bringing uncomfortable subjects onto the stage: marriage, hypocrisy, inherited guilt, venereal disease, corruption, women's legal status, political cowardice, and the cost of living by lies.Ibsen is often called the father of modern drama because he helped move theater away from melodrama and spectacle toward psychological realism, social critique, and morally complex domestic conflict. His influence can be seen in later playwrights across Europe and America, and his plays remain central to theater, literature courses, feminist criticism, and modern performance. A Doll's House in particular made Nora Helmer one of drama's defining figures of self-recognition and made the closed door of the home into a stage for public argument. Read More Read Less
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