Ibsen and Cosmopolitanism: A Chinese and Cross-cultural Perspective

Authors

  • Ning Wang Tsinghua University, Beijing

Keywords:

, cosmopolitanism, Ibsen, diaspora, Peer Gynt, global concern

Abstract

To secure a better understanding of Ibsen and his relations with cosmopolitanism, one should start from the redefinition of the controversial concept of cosmopolitanism. After reconceptualizing cosmopolitanism in terms of ten forms, the author points out that Ibsen’s relations with cosmopolitanism are best represented by three aspects of his work: (1) Ibsen’s cosmopolitan ideas and diasporic experience; (2) the cosmopolitan subject matter of Ibsen’s plays and the global significance of his works; (3) Ibsen’s global concern and his position in world literature. As the play Peer Gynt stands out as the most cosmopolitan piece of Ibsen’s writing, it is analyzed from a cosmopolitan perspective in the article. Given that Ibsen’s cosmopolitan elements find embodiment in the different adaptations and productions of his plays around the world, particularly in China, the author holds that Ibsen not only wrote for his contemporary and local readers and audience but also for other times and other peoples. Such cosopolitan character of his concern, pespective, and writing accounts well for why Ibsen has such wide international reputation and influence.

Author Biography

Ning Wang, Tsinghua University, Beijing

WANG Ning is Zhiyuan Chair Professor of Humanities at Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Changjiang Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Tsinghua University in China. In addition to his numerous books and articles in Chinese, he has authored two books in English: Globalization and Cultural Translation (2004) and Translated Modernities: Literary and Cultural Perspectives on Globalization and China (2010). He has also published extensively in English in many international journals like New Literary History, Critical Inquiry, Modern Language Quarterly, Modern Fiction Studies, boundary 2, Narrative, Neohelicon, European Review, Semiotica, ARIEL, ISLE, Journal of Contemporary China, Journal of Chinese Philosophy, and Comparative Literature Studies.

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Published

2017-02-07

Issue

Section

Perspectives