
Čudnovato prijateljstvo glumca Jeseniusa
Ivan Olbracht's story follows the actor Jesenius, who prepares for the role of Jan Jesenius and, by identifying with him, gradually becomes psychologically destabilized and loses his sense of his own identity.
Ivan Olbracht was a Czech writer and one of the important representatives of socially oriented and psychologically profound prose in interwar Czech literature. His works often combine social criticism with the exploration of the inner conflicts of the individual.
In the work The Strange Friendship of the Actor Jesenius, the focus is on the actor Jesenius, who is preparing for the role of the historical figure Jan Jesenius, a doctor and humanist executed after the uprising of the Czech estates. While working on the role, the actor gradually begins to identify with the character he is playing, so the boundary between his personality and the historical figure becomes increasingly unclear.
As the identification deepens, the actor experiences psychological instability, internal splits, and a loss of sense of reality. The artistic role ceases to be just a theatrical task and turns into an existential obsession that psychologically destroys him. This emphasizes the theme of the danger of complete immersion in an artistic character.
Olbracht's work is significant because, through a modernist approach, he explores the relationship between art and reality, identity, and the limits of the human psyche. As a socially oriented writer, Olbracht remained important in Czech literature for his criticism of society, his interest in the "little man," and his depiction of the moral and psychological dilemmas of the individual in crisis-ridden historical and social circumstances.
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