Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night

Being only rarely mentioned in the text, the myth might seem an anecdotal and trivial detail. The study of the myth of Echo and Narcissus in Twelfth Night shows us however that it is a decisive element in the reading and the understanding of the play. The references are numerous and often implicit....

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Main Author: Cécile Mauré
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2008-03-01
Series:Revue LISA
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/386
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author Cécile Mauré
author_facet Cécile Mauré
author_sort Cécile Mauré
collection DOAJ
description Being only rarely mentioned in the text, the myth might seem an anecdotal and trivial detail. The study of the myth of Echo and Narcissus in Twelfth Night shows us however that it is a decisive element in the reading and the understanding of the play. The references are numerous and often implicit. The characters themselves alternately play the roles of Echo and Narcissus. The play is structured as if it were a mirror in which the characters endlessly duplicate each other and echo their own words. Shakespeare plays with the different versions of the myth that he often blends with subtlety. For the sake of comedy, he dares to parody and demythologize Ovid’s story. The myth seems to divert our attention from the direction of the text but closer analysis suggests the reverse and invites us to find the meaning of the play which can be seen as a real labyrinth.
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spelling doaj-art-ccdcd25bac604201b8188e37844e6ef12025-01-06T09:01:56ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532008-03-016313915510.4000/lisa.386Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth NightCécile MauréBeing only rarely mentioned in the text, the myth might seem an anecdotal and trivial detail. The study of the myth of Echo and Narcissus in Twelfth Night shows us however that it is a decisive element in the reading and the understanding of the play. The references are numerous and often implicit. The characters themselves alternately play the roles of Echo and Narcissus. The play is structured as if it were a mirror in which the characters endlessly duplicate each other and echo their own words. Shakespeare plays with the different versions of the myth that he often blends with subtlety. For the sake of comedy, he dares to parody and demythologize Ovid’s story. The myth seems to divert our attention from the direction of the text but closer analysis suggests the reverse and invites us to find the meaning of the play which can be seen as a real labyrinth.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/386
spellingShingle Cécile Mauré
Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
Revue LISA
title Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
title_full Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
title_fullStr Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
title_full_unstemmed Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
title_short Le mythe comme détour dans Twelfth Night
title_sort le mythe comme detour dans twelfth night
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/386
work_keys_str_mv AT cecilemaure lemythecommedetourdanstwelfthnight