Home > The Master Builder Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Deconstructing Realism in Ibsen's The Master Builder

The Master Builder | Deconstructing Realism in Ibsen's The Master Builder

In the following essay, Hornby examines The Master Builder as a ''point of departure'’ from the realist dramas of Ibsen's middle period to a combination of realism and romanticism that anticipated such twentiethcentury movements as surrealism and expressionism.

It has long been known that Ibsen's late plays—The Master Builder, Little Ejolf, John Gabriel Borkman, and When We Dead Awaken—represent a departure from the famous realistic plays of his middle period. Even Bernard Shaw, who had been obsessively concerned with Ibsen the moralist, described Ibsen as now having ' 'completed the task of warning the world against its idols and antiidols,’’ and instead having written ‘‘tragedies of the dead.’’ But more than this, the late plays demonstrate Ibsen's greatness, both as a significant (though...

[The entire page is 3265 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:

Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...