ABSTRACT

This volume in the Shakespeare Criticism series offers a range of approaches to Twelfth Night, including its critical reception, performance history, and relation to early modern culture.

James Schiffer’s extensive introduction surveys the play’s critical reception and performance history, while individual essays explore a variety of topics relevant to a full appreciation of the play: early modern notions of love, friendship, sexuality, madness, festive ritual, exoticism, social mobility, and detection. The contributors approach these topics from a variety of perspectives, such as new critical, new historicist, cultural materialist, feminist and queer theory, and performance criticism, occasionally combining several approaches within a single essay.

The new essays from leading figures in the field explore and extend the key debates surrounding Twelfth Night, creating the ideal book for readers approaching this text for the first time or wishing to further their knowledge of this stimulating, much loved play.

chapter 1|44 pages

Introduction: taking the long view

Twelfth Night criticism and performance

chapter 2|20 pages

Twelfth Night

Editing puzzles and eunuchs of all kinds

chapter 3|16 pages

“His fancy's queen”

Sensing sexual strangeness in Twelfth Night

chapter 5|15 pages

“The marriage of true minds”

Amity, twinning, and comic closure in Twelfth Night

chapter 7|18 pages

Post-communist nights

Shakespeare, essential masculinity, and Western citizenship

chapter 8|18 pages

Beyond the “lyric” in Illyricum

Some early modern backgrounds to Twelfth Night

chapter 11|16 pages

“The text remains for another attempt”

Twelfth Night, or What You Will on the German stage

chapter 12|12 pages

“What he wills”

Early modern rings and vows in Twelfth Night

chapter 15|15 pages

Whodunit?

Plot, plotting, and detection in Twelfth Night