What is Ibsen's main masterpiece?

1. A Doll's House

The heroine Nora forged her father's signature to borrow money to treat her husband Haier Mao. After the husband knew the story, he was afraid that his reputation would be affected, and he angered his wife for being shameless.

When the creditor voluntarily returned the IOU under the influence of Nora's girlfriend, Haier Mao put on a smiling face to his wife. Nora saw through her husband's selfishness and the inequality between husband and wife, unwilling to be her husband's doll again, and ran away angrily. Ibsen expresses people's moral concepts in social environment through women's problems, in order to realize the highest moral ideal of being a man.

2. Ghosts

Ghosts further depicts the image of a miser on the basis of the works of Roman comedian Prutu and others. Miser Severin put a bag of gold in a hole in the wall, but his daughter's lover, Daisy, saw it. After a while of hesitation and fear, Daisy stole the gold.

Soon, Severin came back to see his own gold. When he opened it, all the gold turned into stones, and he cried bitterly. The script uses psychological monologues to tell the whole story about the miser's money worship, and describes the characters' psychology very realistically.

3. Social Pillar

Social Pillar describes two different worlds, their contrast and contrast, and the natural value judgment after this comparison. These two worlds are men's world and women's world, and Norway, an old society, and America, a young and dynamic society.

Their representatives are Bonik and Louna, a pair of men and women who are related by relatives and friends. They are both siblings and lovers, but their code of conduct and way of action are quite different.

4. Blond

Blond, the protagonist in the play, is a priest in a Norwegian mountain area. His parishioners are poor and ignorant. Blond thought that the poverty of people's material life was the prerequisite for their spiritual development, so he proposed "have everything or nothing".

This man is selfish, vain and timid. When Blond preached, he publicized the spirit of dedicating himself to the ideal, and touched his parishioners with his sincere enthusiasm. They were determined to follow him. However, Blond's ideal is vague, and his call is difficult to understand.

The parishioners suffered, and their reward was only to admit that they had fulfilled their vocation. So they rose up against Blond and abandoned him. Blond was stoned in an avalanche and died alone. On his deathbed, he finally realized that his pursuit was futile.

5. public enemies

The hero doctor Stokeman found that the spa in the convalescent area contained infectious bacteria and insisted on rebuilding the spa. The mayor and the owner of the bathing place threatened and lured him in every way. Finally, he was declared "public enemies" by a "democratic" vote at a speech to explain the truth to the masses in Stockmans. The works criticize the bourgeois egoism and the hypocrisy of democracy, and promote the individualistic thought of isolation and spiritual rebellion.