Centre for Ibsen Studies
The Centre for Ibsen Studies at the University of Oslo engages in multidisciplinary research, teaching, and documentation on the nineteenth-century Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen.
History
The Centre was established by the university in 1991 and opened in 1993. From 2000 to 2010, the Centre was housed in the Oslo Observatory, the university's oldest building. In January 2010 it moved to Henrik Wergelands hus at the Blindern campus.Documentation and dissemination of information are key aspects of the Centre’s mission. It holds with the world's most complete collection of books and articles relating to Ibsen Studies and maintains The Virtual Ibsen Centre. Research areas include textual studies, performance studies, reception studies, and theatre history. The Centre offers a two-year Master’s programme in Ibsen Studies, as well as a number of courses at Bachelor’s level.
Since 2007 the Centre has arranged an each fall.
The Centre for Ibsen Studies also edits the international journal Ibsen Studies, which is published by Taylor & Francis.
Digital Resources
The Centre has developed extensive digital resources that are freely available online at . These resources include:- , an event-based, relational database containing data on over 20,000 performances from around the globe and from 1850 to the present
- , the authoritative scholarly edition of Ibsen's complete works in the original Norwegian
- , open access translations of Ibsen’s works to other languages
- of Ibsen's first theatre, Komediehuset in Bergen
- an archive of related, partly from the Ibsen jubilee in 2006