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Identity And Identity In Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night'

Decent Essays

Twelfth Night and Identity In the play Twelfth Night, Shakespeare delves into the concept of personal identity through his exploration of the character Viola. After discovering that her twin brother is dead following a shipwreck, Viola decides to reshape her identity in Illyria. Hiding her maiden clothes with the sea captain, Viola takes on the name Cesario. It is important to note, Viola did not mime her twin brother Sebastian, but instead formed her own male identity. As Viola makes new acquaintances as Cesario, she alludes to the trickery in her appearance, “I am not that I play” (1.5. 175). Viola controls her own identity and since she knows that biologically she is not a man, she can hint at her biological identity accordingly. She shapes her identity by deciding how she wants others to view her. When Olivia, the countess in the play, asks Viola “What are you?” (I.5. 204), Viola responds “What I am, and what I would, are as secret as maidenhead” (I.5. 207-08). Again, Viola admits to her fraudulent identity and that she is not what her appearance portrays her to be. Regardless of what Viola says, however, the other characters do not recognize her chicanery. Other’s perspectives also influence the concept of forming one’s personal identity. Viola may refer that she is not who she is, but the other characters in the play have already shaped their perspectives of her. For example, to Olivia, Viola is the man she is starting to adore. Olivia does not detect Viola’s tricks because Viola is clothed as a man and so, from her appearance, she must be one. The shaping of identity by appearance and perspective only proves to be misleading when Viola’s brother Sebastian enters the scene. Unbeknownst to Viola, Sebastian survived the shipwreck and is now in Illyria. As Sebastian adjusts to this new land, other characters confuse him as Viola. It is not until the two twin are on stage together that the Duke addresses the concept of identity and perspective, “One face, one voice, one habit, and two persons – a natural perspective that is and is not” (V.1. 211). Before seeing the two twins together, the characters in the play saw Viola and Sebastian as one person, Cesario. They looked alike in appearance and could pass

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