Saturday, July 20, 2019
Disguise in Shakespeares Measure for Measure and Twelfth Night Essays
Disguise in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure and Twelfth Night     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    Disguise is a device Shakespeare employs frequently in both Measure for Measure       and Twelfth Night. It allows a disguised character like the Duke of Vienna to       glean information that would otherwise go unknown, and a character like Viola  to      take advantage of potentially beneficial situations. It gives these  characters      access to worlds that might otherwise be denied; for the Duke, he can now  "haunt      assemblies / Where youth and cost a witless bravery keeps" (1.4.9-10). For       Viola, she might "serve the duke" (1.2.51) and thus hopefully keep company  with      Olivia, who also lost a brother. Disguise is especially appropriate in the       worlds that exist in the two plays: they are characterized by excess and      inversion of proper order. In Measure for Measure, the Duke leaves his  kingdom      unexpectedly in the hands of a deputy; the inversion is continued by the      unprecedented harsh enforcement of the law, something that hasn't been done  in      fourteen years. In Twelfth Night, the title itself suggests a last hurrah,  the      end of the carnival, and Viola personifies this last wildness by taking on a       role opposite in gender to her natural one: she plays a man.      Ã       Michael Margan in "Laughter and Elizabethan Society" glosses Mikhail Bakhtin,       saying that the laughter of carnival is "an ambivalent laughter,  simultaneously      celebrating and mocking, sympathizing and deriding" (34). Laughter, comedy,  and      a world turned upside-down characterize Twelfth Night, Or What You Will, and       allow Viola to successfully don her "masculine usurped attire" (5.1.248) and  win      Olivia's hear...              ... city. Donning a disguise to suit  the      moment does not change the person, however adaptable and convenient it may be  to      achieve certain ends. The Duke of Vienna tells Isabella that though he  removes      his friar's robe he is "not changing heart with habit" (5.1.381), and Viola       laments that "My state is desperate for my master's love" (2.2.37). Just as       carnival and misrule only have a limited reign, so their disguises only alter       Viola and Vienna temporarily.        Works Cited     Margan, Michael. "Laughter and Elizabethan Society," in Contexts of Comedy.       Wells, Stanley, and Gary Taylor, eds. "Measure for Measure". William  Shakespeare: The Complete Works. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1998.      Wells, Stanley, and Gary Taylor, eds. "Twelfth Night, or What You Will".  William  Shakespeare: The Complete Works. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1998.                          
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