1st Edition

Twins and Duality in Early Modern Representation

By Sarah Carter Copyright 2026
204 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Twins and Duality in Early Modern Representation investigates the complex and paradoxical discourse surrounding concepts of twinship in texts written in the early modern period, where twins were considered both miraculous and uncanny. This book explores midwifery manuals, physicians’ texts, and pamphlets, as well as drama, poetry, creative prose, and ballads, and traces how both cultural... Read more

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter One                Fertility and Excess: twin conception, pregnancy, and birth

Chapter Two               Unnatural Connections: twins, monstrosity, and incest

Chapter Three             Cruel Brothers: competition and misogyny in fraternal twins

Chapter Four               Self and Other: identity and twinship

Chapter Five               Disruptive Doubles: twins, identity, and desire

Chapter Six                 Figurative Twinship: homopoetics and homosociality

Conclusion                 

Index

Biography

Sarah Carter is a Senior Lecturer in Early Modern Literature at Nottingham Trent University, UK. Her research interests include early modern gender politics, the reception of Ovid, and intertextuality in the period. She is the author of Ovidian Myth and Sexual Deviance in Early Modern English Literature (2011) and Early Modern Intertextuality (2021).