Articles for tag: Twelfth Night, Viola

Karla News

Viola and Olivia as Parallel Characters in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night

William Shakespeare is known to celebrate the use of motifs in his works, reworking the same characters into many different shapes, moods, and sizes while giving them different names and placing them in various plays. King Claudius might have been found palling around with MacBeth, while Feste and Touchstone might have met in the courtyard ...

William Shakespeare – Twelfth Night

Shakespeare Against Misogyny Twelfth Night (1602) is a comedic play written by William Shakespeare at the beginning of the seventeenth century. At this period of time society was misogynistic affirming that women are inferior to men. Within Twelfth Night there is supporting evidence that William Shakespeare was against social norms exhibiting non-misogynistic sentiments. William Shakespeare ...

Karla News

Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night”- Love

Love is not always as it appears to be, which is what the characters in William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night discover. The first love that is encountered in the play is the love that the Duke has for Olivia; however, Olivia does not share this love. It is through the Duke’s incessant need to win Olivia ...

Karla News

Dramatic Irony in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night

In Twelfth Night William Shakespeare shows what dramatic irony is all about, oblierating the 21st century misconceptions about what irony really entails, by having just one character, Viola, be aware of the irony of the situation taking place around her. Dramatic irony is demonstrated through the fact that an audience would know Olivia has fallen ...

Karla News

Shakespeare’s Disguised Heroines: Rosalind, Julia and Viola

Looking back on the major works of any writer, it is nearly impossible to find a single one who is not a formula writer. Perhaps the greatest of all formula writers is none other than the Bard of Stratford-on-Avon, William Shakespeare. When examining Shakespeare’s canon, it becomes apparent that many of his plot devices are ...