The plays in this volume, each written a decade apart, demonstrate different sides of Henrik Ibsen' genius, but all deal with themes of alienation from society and the breaking down of convention. A Doll‘s House (1879) portrays a woman questioning her duty to her husband and seeking to escape from the stifling confines of her marriage – a theme that shocked contemporary audiences and established Ibsen' name outside Scandinavia. In The League of Youth (1869), his first prose drama, Ibsen created a vivid comedy about a hypocritical politician, and in The Lady from the Sea (1888) he depicts a woman who longs for the life she enjoyed by the sea before she was married.