The Wild Duck by Henrik Ibsen book cover

The Wild Duck

By Henrik Ibsen

0.0 / 50 reviews0 recommendations See more books like this
Embed this book card on your site
Publisher description

This 1884 masterpiece may have its genesis in the hostile reception Ibsen — widely regarded as the father of modern realist drama — had received from the Norwegian public and critics for Ghosts (1881), which gave theater-goers a larger dose of truth than most were willing to bear. His next three plays — The Wild Duck , An Enemy of the People (1882), and Rosmersholm (1886) — focused on the consequences of telling the truth, or forbearing to do so. In The Wild Duck , the idealistic son of a corrupt merchant exposes his father's duplicity, but in the process destroys the very people he wishes to save. Convinced that reality is always superior to illusion, Gregers Werle forces his friends, the Ekdals, to face the truth about their lives. Unfortunately, the truth, involving scandal, illegitimacy, imprisonment, and madness, only serves to wound the Ekdals further. In the play, the wild duck is a symbol of this injured family, and perhaps of the loss of Ibsen's youthful idealism. Moving and powerful, this thought-provoking tragedy shows clearly why Ibsen is regarded as one of the giants of modern theater.

Description provided by Google Books


Top reader reviews

Sign in to review

No reviews yet. Be the first reviewer and help others decide if this book is worth reading.

Sign in to write the first review

Similar books

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙