Love's Labour's Lost (Vol. 38) | Joseph Chaney (essay date 1993)

Joseph Chaney (essay date 1993)

SOURCE: "Promises, Promises: Love's Labor's Lost and the End of Shakespearean Comedy," in Criticism, Vol. XXXV, No. 1, Winter, 1993, pp. 41-65.

[In the essay below, Chaney reviews scholarly attempts at identifying the genre of Love's Labour's Lost and argues that in this play, Shakespeare purposely avoided a conventionally happy ending.]

1. On Subversive Variation and Conventional Variation

The interpretive history of Love's Labor's Lost comprises an exhaustive repertoire of strategies for rescuing the play from the generic implications of its ending. With few exceptions, critics have labored to restore the play to its proper place among the early "happy" or "festive" comedies, as though it stood always in imminent danger of falling from that reassuring category and itself becoming, in effect, a lost labor of love, a failed comedy.1 In this essay I shall dispute, in...

[The entire page is 11460 words long]

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