The clash between the sinister and the sublime in Strindberg’s The Father and Miss Julie
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article deals with naturalistic dramas by August Strindberg from the 1880s,
namely his famous The Father and Miss Julie. Special attention is given to their stage
history in different countries throughout the past century. The authors examine The
Father and Miss Julie through the lens of how various ostents of the sinister and the sublime
manifest themselves through the fabric of the playwright’s renowned plays from
the pre-Inferno period. The two dramas are put in the wide context of Strindberg’s
oeuvre where the opposition of low and higher appetences within a human being are
often rendered as the clash between the feminine and the masculine. In addition to
the above, the article draws attention to the ways of how the two dramas by Strindberg
were received in Russia at the turn of the 20th century, especially by the Russian
symbolist Alexander Blok. In addition to that the article includes valuable material on
a number of theatre productions of The Father and Miss Julie as well on the reviews of
some productions. In order to draw their conclusions the authors examine thoroughly
the main characters of the plays. Thus, it becomes obvious that throughout the decades
the Captain and miss Julie could be interpreted quite differently both by the scholars
and by the directors. In a essayistic manner the article touches upon the question of the
nature of Strindberg’s rampageous concern with the strife between the sexes as well as
upon his so called misogyny.
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Lisovskaya P. A., Naumova A. S. The clash between the sinister and the sublime in Strindberg’s The Father and Miss Julie. Scandinavian Philology, 2022, vol. 20, issue 2, pp. 328–345.