Inter et Inter: A Report on the Metamorphosis of an Actress

Authors

  • ISOBEL BOWDITCH University of the Arts London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22329/p.v4i1.611

Keywords:

Kierkegaard, Existentialism, subjectivity

Abstract

In 1847, Johanne Luise Heiberg, a thirty-year old Danish actress and friend of Søren Kierkegaard, performed the role of Juliet in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet in the Copenhagen theatre. She had played Juliet once before, aged 16, and it was this first performance which helped to launch her prestigious career. The 1847 performance prompted Kierkegaard to write an article for the newspaper Fædrelandet, called 'The Crisis and a Crisis in the Life of an Actress' under the name of Inter et Inter. Its publication contradicted Kierkegaard’s resolve to cease his literary authorship and to write directly under his own name as a religious author. This essay shows what was at stake for Kierkegaard in publishing 'The Crisis and a Crisis in the Life of an Actress' and its pivotal status for him both as a writer and a Christian. Both ‘crises’ of the title refer to a metamorphosis as a return to ‘the beginning’ effected through a series of elliptical characters: the actress, Juliet, Inter et Inter, Kierkegaard himself and the reader. Kierkegaard’s commentary on Frau Heiberg’s performance of Juliet brings together categories of repetition and anxiety in order to understand how “the metamorphosis of the actress” is effected as a return to the 'beginning', mirroring Kierkegaard's own transition from 'literary' to 'religious' writer and ultimately reflecting back on the reader’s own condition as existing individual.

Author Biography

ISOBEL BOWDITCH, University of the Arts London

Research Fellow, Fine Art Research, Chelsea College of Art & Design

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Published

2009-05-05

Issue

Section

Articles