Samantha St. Claire
Prof. Flack
Eng 6
13 October 2012
Absurdity
and Madcap Fun
Everything in
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is made
topsy-turvy in the realms of gender and social order. Simply by changing her
clothes and attitude, the high-class Viola becomes the servant boy, Cesario, to
Duke Orsino, who is in love with the stubborn Lady Olivia. Through a crazy
sequence of events, Viola finds her male persona loved by both Olivia and
Orsino! Taking a look at the rest of Olivia’s household, we find the social
order questioned, mocked, and very unstable. Sir Toby, though a noble knight,
is a drunkard who has drank his money away and seeks to suck extra funds out of
the foolish Sir Andrew. Malvolio, though a servant and greatly annoying due to
his superior attitude, has more prudency and sense than the examples of the
higher class around him. Amazingly, the clown, Fente, who congratulates himself
on his own wit when he says, “Well, God give them wisdom that have it; and
those that are fools, let them use their talents” (I.v.13–14),
is the most intelligent and sensible character in the whole household.
Some order is
restored at the end of this absurd situation, but the curtain closes on many
unanswered questions and dilemmas. As many imbalanced-class homoerotic
undertones as there were in the play, the conflicts are resolved with multiple same-class
heterosexual marriages. Orsino marries Viola but was originally attracted to
the lowly Cesario, leaving us wondering if he’s ultimately satisfied with the
woman that is Viola. Olivia accidentally marries the twin brother of her lover,
leaving us to ponder if she actually got what she wanted or if the aspects of the
female Viola that attracted her will be lacking in the male Sebastian. Antonio’s
obsession for Sebastian is crushed when he finds himself married to Olivia. The
noble Sir Toby and the servant Maria get married, which is the only marriage
here between two different classes (besides the fact that, of course, Sir Toby
is broke). Ultimately it is the annoying, lowly servant Malvolio who keeps his
head in this revelry. He insists that he is not mad and declares the house to
be “as dark as ignorance” (IV.ii.46) while Sebastian
finds himself swept up in it and wondering, “Are all the people mad? […] Or I
am mad, or else this is a dream” (IV.i. 26, 68). The
audience throws their hands into the air in regards to what truly makes a man a
man and a woman a woman, and what actually determines social status.
This play seems to
serve to critique and question the gender and societal norms of Shakespeare’s
England and yet at the same time uphold them. Shakespeare was perhaps trying say
that everyone should pair up with those on their own social level, because even
those who try to marry below their class will always end up marrying within
their own class anyway, even by accident! He does not portray homoerotic
relationships ending happily ever after, and Ladies do not run off with servant
boys. However, he very obviously conveys his ambivalent views towards this
structure by showing how social order and gender norms are not as cut and dry
as it seems. If a girl could be a boy by exchanging her “woman’s weeds” (V.i.271) for male clothing, and if a steward thinks he can
change his social status simply by dressing the part with a “branched velvet
gown” (II.v.44-45), then anyone can truly be
anyone. If it does not come down to intelligence and noble character, does
social order and gender norms all shallowly come down to what you wear and to
whom you were born?
I liked how you mentioned that Feste is one of the smartest people in the household which shows a great example on how just because your in a higher class it doesn't mean you are better educated. I also liked how you interpreted many quotes and put them to good use.
ReplyDeleteI totally can't believe I called him "Fente".... Thanks for the comment! I always love the fools in Shakespeare's plays.
DeleteYour quotes are great, and very appropriate to support your statements. Your analysis is very thorough. I enjoyed your paper so much and look forward to hearing more of your thoughts on up coming analysis papers.
ReplyDeleteHello Samantha,
ReplyDeleteI really, really enjoyed your paper. It really makes you think how interchangeable the social and gender identities were within this play. All your quotes were great supports to summarize the personality of the characters you are describing; such as Feste's little monologue about his wit and intelligence. I completely agree that Feste is awesome, and the most intelligent. In addition, to your analysis on the homo-erotic undertones in the play were very intriguing. I also like the way you weave your quotes into your writing. It is a great strategy to have your paper flow even more. Overall, you did a great job. :)
I really like how you weave your quotes into your work so seamlessly. Your analysis of the intelligence of Feste is interesting. Even though Sir Toby and Maria's marriage is the only one that is between two different classes, don't you think it's the most honest marriage out of all the marriages?
ReplyDeleteWow, I wish I would of read your works earlier. You seem to be my new hero in this class because I am jealous of your capabilities in following directions and most importantly the overall dynamics of your analysis. For instance, unlike mine, your analysis is well structured, and your clearly writing about what is necessary towards the assignment. I can honestly say I can read your analysis without reading the assigned questions and have a great sense that you understand not only the task, but the material as well. I like how your introductory sentences set up readers for your quote, which I may add your quoting is excellent, jealous, and you provide supportive arguements or commentaries that follow. Also I do catch the little things you do that make me enjoy your analysis that I'd like to point out: your creative title to the assignment "Absurdity and madcap fun", your choice of words and punctations: "Through a crazy sequence..." and the use of exclamations to shout to the reader and using a question appropiately to conclude. Harsh critism, stop making my works look bad...just kidding your doing great.
ReplyDeleteNuh uh! Have you read your Discussion Blog posts??? You take analysis to a whole new level! You can take one question from Prof. Flack, find a block quote (a BLOCK quote, not like one line or something), and tear it apart like an English archaeologist (does that make sense?). I have read your stuff and have been like, "wow, I need to take my analysis up a notch or two!" Thank you so much for the thorough and funny and totally encouraging peer review! I'm honestly going to keep everything you said in mind when I write future essays. And yes, exclamation points rock!
DeleteThank you for bringing in a discussion of Feste and how his inclusion in this whirligig of a play furthers Shakespeare's critique of the upper class and again reiterates the Shakespearean trope that worth is based on merit, not simply social standing. Excellent discussion in the end of costume/clothing changes and how deeply identity was tied to appearances...I wanted to read more of your ideas on this. Excellent quote use and integration.
ReplyDelete