상세정보
우리 죽은 자들이 깨어날 때 (When We Dead Awaken) 헨립입센희곡집, 들으면서 읽는 영어 명작 616

우리 죽은 자들이 깨어날 때 (When We Dead Awaken) 헨립입센희곡집, 들으면서 읽는 영어 명작 616

저자
헨리크 입센 (Henrik Ibsen) 저
출판사
유페이퍼
출판일
2016-11-15
등록일
2018-10-22
파일포맷
EPUB
파일크기
6MB
공급사
YES24
지원기기
PC PHONE TABLET 웹뷰어 프로그램 수동설치 뷰어프로그램 설치 안내
현황
  • 보유 1
  • 대출 0
  • 예약 0

책소개

◆ 국내에 자주 소개되지 않은 명작을 발굴하여 전자책으로 출간하는 숨어있는 명작 시리즈 ◆ 대학로에서 공연 되었던 작품이다. -- Plot summary - - Ibsen's When We Dead Awaken character pictures The first act takes place outside a spa overlooking a fjord. Sculptor Arnold Rubek and his wife Maia have just enjoyed breakfast and are reading newspapers and drinking champagne. They marvel at how quiet the spa is. Their conversation is lighthearted, but Arnold hints at a general unhappiness with his life. Maia also hints at disappointment. Arnold had promised to take her to a mountaintop to see the whole world as it is, but they have never done so. The hotel manager passes by with some guests and inquires if the Rubeks need anything. During their encounter, a mysterious woman dressed in white passes by, followed closely by a nun in black. Arnold is drawn to her for some reason. The manager does not know much about her, and he tries to excuse himself before Squire Ulfheim can spot him. Unable to do so, Ulfheim corners him and requests breakfast for his hunting dogs. Spotting the Rubeks, he introduces himself and mocks their plans to take a cruise, insisting that the water is too contaminated by other people. He is stopping at the spa on his way to a mountain hunt for bears, and he insists that the couple should join him, as the mountains are unpolluted by people. Maia takes Ulfheim up on his offer to watch his dogs eat breakfast, leaving Arnold alone with the mysterious woman. He quickly realizes that she is Irena, his former model. Irena constantly refers to herself as being 'dead'. During their conversation, she explains that posing for Arnold was akin to a kind of 'self murder', where he captured her soul and put it into his masterpiece, a sculpture called 'Resurrection'. He confesses that he has never been the same since working with Irena. Though 'Resurrection' brought him great fame and an abundance of other work, he feels a similar kind of death as Irena feels. Irena mysteriously alludes to kil

QUICKSERVICE

TOP