The Ghost Sonata is a key text in the development of modernist drama and a vivid example of a chamber play. In it, Strindberg creates a world in which ghosts walk in bright daylight, a beautiful woman is transformed into a mummy and lives in the closet, and the household cook sucks all the nourishment out of the food before she serves it to her masters.
The Ghost Sonata relates the adventures of a young student, who idealizes the lives of the inhabitants of a stylish apartment building in Stockholm. He makes the acquaintance of the mysterious Jacob Hummel, who helps him to find his way into the apartment, only to find that it is a nest of betrayal and sickness. The world, the student learns, is hell and human beings must suffer to achieve salvation. The play centers on a family of strangers who meet for the sake of meeting. They exchange no dialogue, nor gestures; they simply sit and bask in their own misfortune.
Characters
The Old Man, Jacob Hummel
The Student, Mr. Arkenholz
The Milkmaid, An apparition
The Superintendent's wife
The Superintendent
The Dead Man, a Consul
The Lady in Black, Daughter of the Dead Man and the Superintendent's wife
The Colonel
The Mummy, the Colonel's wife
The Young Lady, the Colonel's daughter, but actually the Old Man's daughter
Johansson, Hummel's servant
Bengtsson, The Colonel's footman
The Fiancée, a white-haired woman, formerly engaged to Hummel