Naturally defined gender:Sir Toby of Maria (A2S3) | “She’s a beagle, true bred, and one that adores me. What o’that?” |
Naturally defined gender:Orsino to Viola (A5S1) | “Give me thy hand. And let me see thee in thy woman’s weeds.” |
Naturally defined gender:Orsino to Viola (A5S1) | “and for your service done him, so much against the mettle of your sex…” |
Naturally defined gender:Sebastian (A5S1) | “You have been mistook. But nature to her bias drew in that.” |
Naturally defined gender:Orsino of Olivia (A2S4) | “But ’tis that miracle and queen of genius the nature pranks her in attracts my soul.” |
Women lose the freedoms which the period of misrule had allowed them:Olivia (A1S5) | “Most sweet lady -“”A comfortable doctrine, and much may be said of it. Where lies your text?” |
Women lose the freedoms which the period of misrule had allowed them:Olivia re. woman’s body (A1S5) | “I will give out divers schedules of my beauty; it shall be inventoried, and every particle and utensil labelled…” |
Transgressive challenges to essentialist notions:Sebastian of Viola (A2S1) | “She bore a mind that envy could not but call fair” |
Transgressive challenges to essentialist notions:Olivia of Cesario (A1S5) | “Methinks I feel this youth’s perfections with an invisible and subtle stealth to creep in at mine eyes.” |
Transgressive challenges to essentialist notions:Antonio to Sebastian (A3S3) | “My desire more sharp than filled steel, did spur me forth.” |
Masculine notions of perfection:Orsino (A2S4) | “There is no woman’s sides can bide the beating of so strong a passion as love doth give my heart.” |
Masculine notions of perfection:Orsino to Cesario (A1S4) | “Thy small pipe is as the maiden’s organ, shrill and sound, and all is semblative a woman’s part.” |
Valerie Traub, “The homoerotics of Shakespearean Comedy” | “Despite its closure, then, Twelfth Night’s conclusion seems only ambiviantly invested in the hetrosexuality it imposes.” |
Valerie Traub, “The homoerotics of Shakespearean Comedy” | “Twelfth Night disrupts the cultural code that keeps both men and women in line, subverting the patriarchy from within.” |
R.W. Maslen, “Twelfth Night, Gender and Comedy” | “The trio of articulate women who dominate Twelfth Night transform the conventional Elizabethan ideal of a woman.” |
Valerie Traub, “The homoerotics of Shakespearean Comedy” | “the result (of the play) is a more rigid dedication to the ideology of binarism” |
Gender as a performance (Viola, Act 1, scene 5) | “I can say little more than I have studied, and that question’s out of my part.” |
Masculine notions of perfection (Viola, Act 1, scene 2) | “Oh that I serve that lady, and might not be delivered to the world” |
Masculine notions of perfection (Sebastian) | “A spirit I am indeed, but am in that dimension grossly clad which from the womb I did participate.” |
Gender as a performance (Cesario) | “Disguise, I see thou art a wickedness, wherein the pregnant enemy does much” |
Gender as a performance (Viola, Act 1, scene 2) | “Conceal me what I am, and be my aid for such disguise as haply shall become the form of my intent.” |
Naturally defined gender (Orsino, Act 2, scene 4) | “For women are as roses, whose fair flower, being once displayed, doth fall that very hour.” |
Transgressive challenges to essentialist notions:Cesario re. Olivia (Act 2, scene 2) | “She made good view of me; indeed, so much, that sure methought her eyes had lost her tongue,” |
Transgressive challenges to essentialist notions: Cesario re. Orsino (Act 5, scene 1) | “After him I love more than I love these eyes, more than my life, more by all mores, than e’er I shall love wife.” |
Literature: Twelfth Night Feminist Quotes
July 4, 2019