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E-raamat: Twelfth Night: Language and Writing

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"A new type of study guide which combines an exploration of Shakespeare's language with specific help for students looking to develop their own critical responses and skills. This lively and informative guide uses close reading of Twelfth Night's complexlanguage to explore its themes and plot"--

Frances E. Dolan examines the puzzling pronouns and puns, the love poetry, mischief, and disguises of Twelfth Night, exploring its themes of grief, obsessive love, social climbing and gender identity, and helping you towards your own close-readings.

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A new type of study guide which combines an exploration of Shakespeare's language with specific help for students looking to develop their own critical responses and skills. This lively and informative guide uses close reading of Twelfth Nights complex language to explore its themes and plot.
Series editor's preface vii
Preface x
Introduction - ways in 1(40)
Periodization
2(3)
Starting with when and where
5(2)
Mapping the characters
7(3)
Boy actors, cross-dressing and sexuality
10(11)
Queen Elizabeth I
21(6)
Malvolio and puritanism
27(9)
Opening strategies
36(5)
1 Language in print: 'tis poetical
41(44)
The first scene
42(2)
Parts of speech
44(6)
Verse and prose
50(3)
The hunting conceit
53(2)
Like a cloistress: Talking about Olivia
55(4)
Carpe diem
59(2)
Blazon
61(4)
Writing matters
65(20)
2 Language, character and plot
85(22)
Speakers and their speeches: Pronouns and conditionals in 2.4 and 5.1
86(11)
Language and plot
97(3)
Writing matters
100(7)
3 Language through time
107(28)
Bears, baiting and other animal imagery
108(4)
Cut
112(6)
Suit
118(1)
Metal/meddle/mettle
119(3)
Nature's bias
122(4)
Writing matters
126(9)
4 From reading to writing
135(26)
What can we make of what isn't said? What does silence tell us?
139(3)
What are you? Proof and plot
142(2)
What does it take to create an ending?
144(2)
What does the plot do?
146(1)
What makes for a good marriage in Illyria? Is marriage a happy ending?
147(5)
`A candle and pen, ink, and paper': Getting down to the business of writing
152(9)
Bibliography 161
Frances E. Dolan is Professor of English at the University of California, Davis, USA. She has also taught at Miami University, the University of Chicago, and Columbia University. Her textbook, The Taming of the Shrew: Texts and Contexts (1996), continues to be taught widely, as do the five plays she has edited. In addition, Dolan is the author of four scholarly books, most recently True Relations: Reading, Literature, and Evidence in Seventeenth-Century England, as well as numerous articles in journals and collections. A former president of the Shakespeare Association of America, she has been awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities (at the Newberry and Folger libraries), the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and, most recently, the Huntington Library, where she was a Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow.