Love's Comedy

· 문학일독
Ebook
221
Pages
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About this ebook

Henrik Ibsen’s Love’s Comedy, written in the mid-19th century, is a satirical play critiquing social conventions of love and marriage. The story revolves around Mrs. Halm, her daughters Svanhild and Anna, and several young men boarding at their villa. On a summer afternoon, lively conversations expose the youths’ ideals and struggles with romance. Falk, the central figure, scorns traditional notions of love, while Lind happily announces his engagement to Anna. Svanhild, marked by independence yet challenged by expectations, embodies the tension between personal desire and societal norms.

About the author

Henrik Ibsen(1828-1906) was a Norwegian playwright known as the father of modern drama, celebrated for exposing social hypocrisy and exploring inner conflicts in his works. He began with elements of romanticism but gradually shifted toward realism and symbolism, delving deeply into human existence and societal issues. His major plays such as A Doll’s House, Ghosts, An Enemy of the People, and The Wild Duck stirred great controversy in their time. His dramas emphasize themes of individual freedom, responsibility, and the struggle for truth, remaining widely performed across the world today. Ibsen is regarded as a revolutionary figure who transformed the form and substance of theater, leaving a profound legacy in both literature and drama.

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