Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Viola’s Gender Roles in Twelfth Night
The fluidity and ambiguity with which Viola presents gender is central to the drama of Twelfth Night. But to what extent are Viola's gender roles essential to the comedy of the play? The arrivals of Viola and Sebastian in Illyria serve as the catalysts for drama in Twelfth Night. The presence of twins of different sexes yet identical in appearance is a dramaturgical device crucial to the comic resolution, whilst being somewhat farcical.It is the misunderstandings which Violaââ¬â¢s cross-dressing inevitably causes which make her inverted gender roles so essential to the comedy of the play. Through her disguise, she assumes typically male roles such as of the ââ¬Ëfoolââ¬â¢, and the comic value of her double identity is heightened through the questioning of the gender conventions of Shakespearean theatre.Yet, Violaââ¬â¢s disguise brings with it a strain of melancholy, lessening her assumed gender rolesââ¬â¢ comic impact on the play. Violaââ¬â¢s cross-dressing subverts normality in the respect that she abruptly assumes typically male roles such as that of the Fool. Her first meeting with Olivia as a messenger of Orsinoââ¬â¢s love is marked by her different approach to courtship.She launches into a preprepared speech of compliments with a poetic apostrophe: ââ¬Ëmost radiant, exquisite and unmatchable beautyââ¬â¢, only to break into prose to check that she is indeed speaking to Olivia. Violaââ¬â¢s repeatedly her speech as conventionally courtly, as it is ââ¬Ëexcellently well pennedââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëtis poeticalââ¬â¢; yet, these comments essentially refer to its artificiality.In fact, juxtaposed to the opening of the play, this whole meeting is a parody of Orsinoââ¬â¢s clichà © approach and indeed the conventions of courtly love. Viola deflates the romantic pretensions of Orsinoââ¬â¢s embassy, and such ridicule of the ââ¬Ëmale archetypeââ¬â¢ by a woman is highly comical for its suspension of the accepted inferiority o f women in society.Yet, somewhat more absurd is the fact she has also unintentionally assumed his positions of Oliviaââ¬â¢s courtier and indeed of a character of great power and superiority, as her actions free both Orsino and Olivia of their rigidity. Furthermore, it is such witty manipulations of others that prove her to be a kind of fool.Act Three Scene One is marked by Viola and Festeââ¬â¢s repartee of attempts to surpass each otherââ¬â¢s wit; Violaââ¬â¢s reply to Festeââ¬â¢s comment ââ¬ËNow Jove in his next commodity send thee a beardââ¬â¢ is ââ¬ËI am almost sick for one, though I would not have it grow on my chinââ¬â¢. Both comments are pointed references to gender and are thus dramatic irony;Festeââ¬â¢s taunting of Cesarioââ¬â¢s lack of virility may also serve as a comical meta-theatrical reference to the boy actor playing Viola. However, there is a degree of pathos to Violaââ¬â¢s admission, as the beard she desires if not her own is surely that of Orsino; thereby, she emphasises the complications of her disguise in pursuing her love interest.Yet, most prominent is Violaââ¬â¢s parallel to Feste as a Fool. They have a mutual appreciation of each otherââ¬â¢s wit, as Feste comments: ââ¬ËI think I saw your wisdom thereââ¬â¢, whilst Viola appreciates the intelligence behind his foolery: ââ¬Ëfor folly that he wisely shows is fitâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢ She realises the irrationality around her and employs it to her advantage in choosing to cross-dress. Certainly, the whole nature of her disguise itself questions the gaps of seeming, being and knowing, of which the Fool typically explores. Such challenges to male roles make her gender ambiguity amplify the comedy of the play.Viola was played by a boy actor under the conventions of Shakespearean theatre, and this physical fact adds a level of confusion heightening the comedy of her gender roles. Such misplacement is denounced by Oliviaââ¬â¢s remark in Act One: ââ¬Ë you are now out of your text / but we will draw the curtain and show you the pictureââ¬â¢ and certainly by the repeated allusions to Cesarioââ¬â¢s femininity, such as Orsinoââ¬â¢s remark on her appearance: ââ¬Ëall is semblative a womanââ¬â¢s partââ¬â¢.Oliviaââ¬â¢s unveiling is a pivotal moment as it represents the end of the mourning for her dead brother and essentially ââ¬Ëallowsââ¬â¢ the comedy to commence for the audience. It is an ironic act to a character ââ¬Ëveiledââ¬â¢ herself, and meta-theatrical reference of ââ¬Ëcurtainââ¬â¢ indicates the misplacement of the actor of Viola as much as the character.For as much as her disguise is her own ploy, it is Shakespeareââ¬â¢s dramatic device. Orsino taunts Cesario for his lack of virility, yet he may also be commenting on the male actorââ¬â¢s credibility for the ââ¬Ëpartââ¬â¢ of a woman. No matter how convincing the boy actor was playing Viola, the audience is continually aware that there is a male body under the disguise of a woman and thus a double sex reversal is taking place in Violaââ¬â¢s disguise.Yet, the ââ¬Ëcurtainââ¬â¢ could be symbolic of the uncovering of much more radical approaches than the conformities of Elizabethan theatre. Much of the playââ¬â¢s comedy comes from Shakespeareââ¬â¢s trifling with homosexuality. In Elizabethan England, the idea of such relationships would have been unusual and considerably more absurd than a modern audience may appreciate.The misunderstandings caused byà Violaââ¬â¢s cross-dressing are the root of what audiences of the day would have seen as comic ambiguity. The audience knows Olivia unwittingly desires a woman when she is drawn to the young servant, and we see the relationship between Orsino and Cesario develop throughout the course of the play; indeed, some modern productions show the bond between them in overtly homosexual terms to heighten the comedy. In keeping with the conventions of Eliza bethan comedy as a whole, the play resolves in heterosexual marriage; yet, despite references to Viola in female clothing, this never actually happens.Orsinoââ¬â¢s parting lines are: ââ¬ËCesario, come ââ¬â / For so shall you be while you are a manââ¬â¢. Distinct references to her male alias yet none of her feminine form still denote a comic male to male relationship. For, whilst the fact the use of a male actor for Viola is humorous in itself, it is the radical implications of this role which make Violaââ¬â¢s character so vital to the comedy of Twelfth Night. However, despite the obvious comic implications of her disguise, from Violaââ¬â¢s double identity arises sexual conflict and the potential for tragedy.In her aside at the end of Act 2 Scene 2, she sympathises with Olivia, remarking ââ¬Ëpoor lady, she were better love a dreamââ¬â¢, emphasising that as an object of Oliviaââ¬â¢s desire she is unattainable. She understands because as Cesario her love for Orsino cannot be reciprocated. He insinuates her gender ambiguity in the previous act: ââ¬ËFor they shall yet belie thy happy years, / That say thou art a manââ¬â¢. For whilst the disguise grants her access to both parties, the price she pays is the loss of any gender identity, as she cannot be a woman to Orsino or a man to Olivia .She frequently alludes to her gender disparity, such as when Olivia confesses her love in Act Three Scene One, as Violaââ¬â¢s reply is: ââ¬ËI am not what I am.ââ¬â¢ Her response is dramatic irony at its most explicit and effectively summarises the extent of her travesty in inciting Oliviaââ¬â¢s affections. However, this statement is typical of her expression throughout the play; such evasions and wordplay are because she cannot speak of her real self.To the audience, it is somewhat striking that her real name is not pronounced until the very last scene, when Sebastian greets her: ââ¬ËThrice welcome, drowned Viola.ââ¬â¢ The playâ⠬â¢s resolution aligns with the conventions of comedy in settling misunderstandings and proving a ââ¬Ëhappy endingââ¬â¢; there is no sense of Violaââ¬â¢s individual identity until the reunion with her brother, when correct gender roles are asserted.However, the tragedy of herà character is heightened further by the fact Orsino does not even mention her real name in his parting line. Overall, while some critics argue Viola is the most developed of the characters in Twelfth Night, for she is not constrained to a stock character, this inevitably adds an oblique side.Her gender roles may heighten the comedy, but the emotional toll of the disguise which she calls a ââ¬Ëwickednessââ¬â¢ should not be ignored, and detract her from the role as a simple asset in the playââ¬â¢s comedy.To conclude, the inversion of her gender roles is radiant of the ââ¬Ëcarnival spiritââ¬â¢ so prevalent in Twelfth Night. We see that the playââ¬â¢s comedy is very much enhanced by V iolaââ¬â¢s cross-dressing, in as much the gender conventions her masquerade breaks as the inevitable misunderstandings.However, we see also that cross-dressing has certain tragic implications, true to the nature of comedy harbouring a dark underside. Thus, her gender roles are to a limited extent essential to the comedy of the play.
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