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The Quintessence of Ibsenism (Version 2)

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

This is an essay providing an extended analysis of the works of Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen and of Ibsen's critical reception in England. Shaw uses this "exposition of Ibsenism" to illustrate the imperfections of British society, using the idea of an imaginary "community of a thousand persons," divided into three categories: Philistines, Idealists, and the lone Realist.

The main discussion revolves around Ibsen's recurring topic of the strong character holding out against social hypocrisy, while stating in his essay's final sentence that the quintessence of Ibsenism is that "there is no formula." ( Michele Eaton) (4 hr 17 min)

Chapters

Preface

4:08

Read by Gesine

The Two Pioneers

26:48

Read by Helen Taylor

Ideals and Idealists

19:11

Read by Soumen Barua

The Womanly Woman

24:23

Read by Soumen Barua

The Plays-Brand

5:09

Read by asterix

The Plays - Peer Gynt

13:59

Read by asterix

The Plays - Emperor and Galilean

22:57

Read by KHand

The Plays - The League of Youth

3:42

Read by KHand

The Plays - Pillars of Society

5:28

Read by wolfstevent

The Plays - A Dolls House

6:05

Read by inflected

The Plays - Ghosts

16:08

Read by Jack Daniel

The Plays - An Enemy of the People

7:14

Read by asterix

The Plays - The Wild Duck

8:12

Read by asterix

The Plays - Rosmersholm

14:28

Read by Wendy Almeida

The Plays - The Lady From the Sea

4:58

Read by KHand

The Plays - Hedda Gabler

13:35

Read by inflected

The Plays - The Moral of the Plays

22:10

Read by asterix

Appendix Part 1

25:51

Read by Philip Panos

Appendix Part 2

13:31

Read by Philip Panos