Search results
The quote shows how fully Othello’s feelings towards Desdemona have changed: he now hates her as passionately as he previously loved her. The quote darkly foreshadows how Othello will be unmoved by Desdemona’s insistence on her innocence and pleas for her life to be spared.
The most prominent form of prejudice on display in Othello is racial prejudice. In the very first scene, Roderigo and Iago disparage Othello in explicitly racial terms, calling him, among other things, "Barbary horse" and "thick lips."
In its representation of a Black character who is promised a happy inclusion in Venetian life only to have it eroded within a tragic frame, Othello is a play that does the work of challenging the appeal of happiness itself.
21 maj 2024 · However, the exploration of racism, sexism, and deception also is essential to the play. In this article, our writers elaborate on all the key themes of Othello and explain why Shakespeare included them. Every theme is illustrated by the quotes from the play.
1 lut 2024 · William Shakespeare’s “Othello” is a dramatic tragedy that delves into the themes of jealousy, love, betrayal, and racism. Set against the backdrop of Venice and Cyprus during the Ottoman-Venetian war, the story revolves around Othello, a Moorish general in the Venetian army.
To the Venetians, he is simply "the Moor" (I,iii,47), a term that underscores his foreignness and carries negative racial connotations. Iago refers to Othello as "an old black ram" (I,i,88)...
28 lis 2011 · In examining the origins and history of the play's identificatory dynamic, I aim neither to recapture originary meaning nor to correct a history of misreadings, but to reunite race and tragedy in an Othello that speaks to our own critical and cultural circumstances.